Ford Just Made It a Lot Easier to Buy a Car This Summer

Ford Just Made It a Lot Easier to Buy a Car This Summer

On the surface, Ford’s latest announcement is a fantastic deal for car buyers. The company is retiring its “employee pricing for all” campaign and rolling out an aggressive “Zero, Zero, Zero” summer sales event: zero down payment, zero percent interest for 48 months, and zero payments for the first 90 days.

It’s a tempting offer, but when you look closer at the economic landscape, it starts to look less like a confident summer promotion and more like a defensive maneuver against a gathering storm. The automaker’s new “zero down, zero interest” is a calculated response to economically stressed consumers and the looming expiration of the $7,500 EV tax credit.

Ford says it’s responding to customers who, squeezed by higher mortgage rates and travel costs, want to buy a new car without a hefty upfront payment. “Many families have seen their savings go toward higher mortgage rates and summer travel costs,” Rob Kaffl, who is director, U.S. sales and dealer relations said in a blog post.. “They want a new vehicle but also want options that allow them to forgo an upfront down payment.”

Data from the Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s latest Q1 2025 Household Debt and Credit report paints a stark picture. Total auto loan debt in the U.S. has swelled to $1.64 trillion. More importantly, the rate of serious delinquencies—loans 90 or more days past due—has climbed to 2.94%. While this figure has stabilized recently, it remains elevated, signaling that a significant number of Americans are struggling to make their car payments. For many, a down payment is no longer feasible, and with average new car loan rates still high, a zero percent interest offer is a massive financial relief.

Ford wants to lure cash-strapped buyers for gas-powered F-150s and Broncos. But there’s a second, more urgent deadline that may be fueling this fire sale: the EV tax cliff.

The hugely popular $7,500 federal tax credit for new electric vehicles is set to expire permanently on September 30. After that date, the single biggest government incentive for buying an EV vanishes overnight. This creates a massive sense of urgency for automakers like Ford to sell their current inventory of electric vehicles, like the Mustang Mach-E and F-150 Lightning, before they effectively become $7,500 more expensive to the consumer on October 1.

While Ford celebrated strong overall Q2 sales, a closer look at industry data reveals a telling weakness: sales of its fully electric models have been declining. The company’s growth is being propped up by gas and hybrid trucks, not the EVs that are about to lose their biggest selling point.

By extending its “Ford Power Promise” and rolling it into this new zero percent financing deal, Ford is essentially sounding an alarm bell. The company is telling potential EV buyers that this is their last, best chance to get a deal before the market fundamentally changes. It’s an aggressive attempt to clear out EV inventory and lock in sales from anxious consumers before a challenging economic climate and the end of government subsidies create a perfect storm for the auto industry.

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