F-150 Lightning reservations are so huge Ford had to stop taking them

It’s not uncommon in New York or San Francisco for a new mom to put her baby’s name on a years-long waiting list for a coveted private preschool slot.

Well, now wannabe owners of the all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning find themselves in a similar battle.

Put a name on the list and hope and pray that name makes it to the top. Because, right now, the list is so long that some fans of America’s bestselling pickup franchise won’t get the 2022 model year and will need to wait until 2023 or even later.

Kelly Jones, left, and Rhonda Cenance, pre-delivery inspectors look over a 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning inside the plant where it will be built, the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center at the Ford Rouge Plant in Dearborn on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021.

The current demand for the all-electric Ford F-150 Lightning is so huge that Ford Motor Company on Wednesday actually stopped taking the $100 refundable reservation deposits accepted since the global reveal in May. 

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“We’re completely oversubscribed with our battery-electric vehicles, Lightning especially,” Ford CEO Jim Farley told Jim Cramer on the CNBC Investing Club on Thursday during a livestream broadcast.

“The F-150 Lightning, America’s bestselling vehicle. Everyone loves the electric version. They haven’t even driven it yet,” Farley said between meetings with his board of directors at Ford World Headquarters in Dearborn. “Wait until they drive it. Zero to 60, like a 911 (Porsche). It’s just an incredible product. It powers your house for four days. We had to stop reservations, we got so many.”

Ford has so many reservations for the Lightning that, if they all turned into purchases, the volume would far exceed the company’s capacity to fill orders.

“We stopped at 200,000,” Farley told CNBC, explaining the art of “capacitizing.”

Ford plans to build 70,000 to 80,000 electric pickups initially, Farley said, “We’re gonna to try to double that. … Don’t bet against Ford when we have to increase capacity. This is what we do.

Official orders will begin getting booked in January. And delivery of the battery-operated vehicle is scheduled to begin in mid-2022.

Tweaking the system to meet demand

Ford will begin working down its reservation list and “inviting” people if they want to convert to an order; if so, the process will begin. If people decline, the next name on the list gets invited to purchase. 

“And so on,” said Hannah Ooms, Ford spokesperson. 

“A reservation allows a customer to be invited to place an order as production becomes available,” Ooms said 

The 2022 Ford F-150 Lightning getting a charge at a charging station near the end of its build at the Rouge Electric Vehicle Center at the Ford Rouge Plant in Dearborn on Thursday, Sept. 16, 2021.

“For Lightning, the ordering process will be unique. Due to the extraordinarily high demand. Ford is implementing a waved invitation approach to efficiently convert reservations to orders. Reservation holders will be invited to place orders at staggered dates so we can more easily provide directional delivery timing to customers during the order process. Reservation holders will receive an invitation to order via email from Ford. The number of customers invited will vary by wave.”