New parents discover unexpected use for Ford F-150 Lightning’s front trunk

Emily Jaehnert regularly drives an all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning pickup truck more than 400 miles round trip with her 13-month-old daughter to Seattle for appointments with a neurologist and others who treat premature babies.

“I’ll be honest, when my husband said we’d be getting a truck, I said, ‘We don’t need a truck. What are we going to do with a truck? We don’t have a farm,'” Jaehnert told the Free Press. “But it’s like a living room on wheels.”

For decades, Ford has promoted its pickups as “Built Ford Tough.” New parents are tweeting a different selling point with the Lightning — diaper changes. Jaehnert and her husband of Richland, Washington discovered early on they can change the baby privately and easily in a spacious, protected front trunk, known as the frunk.

That’s the spot that would hold an engine if a giant battery weren’t tucked under the electric truck body instead.

Emily Jaehnert of Richland, Washington is changing the diapers of her daughter MacKenzie on Dec. 29, 2022.

“Having that space in that vehicle, especially with (MacKenzie) being premature, and avoiding any public areas and being able to do it in the truck on the go, it’s not only peace of mind but super convenient and a little bit fun,” Emily Jaehnert said. “We pop the trunk, people expect to see an engine and we’re changing a baby. We get people asking about the truck and seeing it as a family vehicle.”

Parents in a pinch have always changed diapers while balancing children on backseats — rarely in trunks.

Yet no one thought to market the all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning to parents as the answer to germ-covered changing tables in rest areas, gas stations and fast-food restaurants. The whole world has grown more apprehensive about taking children into highly trafficked unclean areas, especially since the pandemic began.

Emily Jaehnert holds her daughter, MacKenzie, while their Ford F-150 Lightning was charging. This is part of their road trip back from Wisconsin to Richland, Washington in September 2022.

“It’s been fun seeing how our customers are using their frunks” — for everything from powering tools to changing babies, said Emma Bergg, a Ford spokeswoman who drives her F-150 Lightning with her son to Costco and puts groceries in the frunk. She rarely shopped in the old gasoline-powered F-150 pickup because groceries would either slide around the truck bed in back or get squished on the floor beneath her son’s feet.