The F-150 offers more trim levels than any other pickup truck on the market — seven configurations spanning from a basic work truck to a 700-horsepower off-road monster. For Nassau County buyers, narrowing down which trim fits actual needs (rather than aspirational ones) saves thousands without sacrificing anything meaningful.
Bottom Line: The F-150 XLT hits the value peak for most Long Island buyers — full crew cab, capable engine options, and enough tech to satisfy daily drivers without the premium-trim price jump. Lariat is the sweet spot for buyers who want leather and advanced driver assists.
- XL: work truck, fleet-oriented, minimal comfort features
- XLT: adds power windows, sync 4 infotainment, chrome accents — volume seller
- Lariat: leather, heated seats, SYNC 4A with larger screen — the smart daily driver
- King Ranch / Platinum: luxury appointments, premium materials
- Limited: near-full-size luxury truck performance
- Raptor: 37” tires, live-valve shocks, 450 hp — off-road performance machine
The Full Trim Stack
| Trim | MSRP (SuperCrew) | Standout Features |
|---|---|---|
| XL | ~$35,000 | Steel wheels, vinyl seating, 8" touchscreen |
| XLT ★ | ~$42,000 | SYNC 4, power windows/locks, LED headlights, cloth/vinyl seating |
| Lariat ★ | ~$52,000 | Leather, SYNC 4A 12" screen, heated/cooled seats, BLIS |
| King Ranch | ~$62,000 | Premium leather, running boards, B&O audio, unique styling |
| Platinum | ~$65,000 | Massaging seats, panoramic roof option, 360° camera |
| Limited | ~$73,000 | Highest standard content, chrome exterior package, max tech |
| Raptor | ~$72,000 | 3.5L twin-turbo, Fox live-valve shocks, 37" tires, 450 hp |
For the full F-150 ownership story including towing, payload, and engine comparisons, see our complete F-150 guide for Nassau County.
XL: The Fleet Truck
The XL is built for commercial use — contractors, municipalities, fleet operators. It offers everything structural about the F-150 without the comfort layer. For personal use, the XL requires adding options to reach a livable specification, which erodes the price advantage quickly.
The practical gap between an optioned-up XL and a base XLT is often $1,500 or less. Most Nassau County buyers should skip directly to XLT.
XLT: Where Most Buyers Should Start
The XLT is the F-150’s volume seller nationwide and the right entry point for Long Island buyers. It arrives with SYNC 4 infotainment and an 8-inch touchscreen, power windows and locks, LED headlights, and cloth seating that wears better than it sounds.
Key XLT option packages to consider:
- 302A Mid Package: adds heated front seats, remote start, sport appearance — worth $2,500
- Sport Appearance Package: blacked-out exterior trim, sport bumper
- Tow Package: adds trailer brake controller, upgraded cooling — essential if you’re pulling anything
Lariat: The Daily Driver Sweet Spot
Lariat is where the F-150 becomes a legitimate premium daily driver. The jump from XLT includes leather seating surfaces, heated and cooled front seats, the SYNC 4A 12-inch touchscreen, and Ford’s BLIS blind-spot monitoring system with trailer coverage.
The 12-inch screen is noticeably better than the 8-inch — faster, cleaner interface with standard wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto. For the buyer who spends significant time in the cab, this alone justifies the Lariat premium over a base XLT.
King Ranch, Platinum, Limited: Luxury Tier
All three luxury trims share the same mechanical platform — the differences are styling, material choices, and comfort features.
King Ranch leans into premium leather and a Western-influenced aesthetic. The two-tone leather with contrasting stitching is genuinely distinctive. Standard B&O audio system.
Platinum adds massaging front seats, a panoramic roof option, and the 360-degree camera system. For buyers who prioritize technology and cabin comfort, this is the move.
Limited is the maximum-specification F-150 — nearly every feature available on the truck comes standard. At ~$73,000, it competes directly with the RAM 1500 Limited and Silverado High Country.
Raptor: A Truck Built for Going Off-Road Fast
The Raptor is not a luxury truck — it’s a purpose-built off-road performance machine. The 3.5-liter twin-turbo EcoBoost produces 450 horsepower (700 hp in the Raptor R with a supercharged V8). Fox live-valve shocks, a wider track, and 37-inch all-terrain tires handle terrain that would stop any standard F-150.
On Long Island roads, the Raptor’s performance advantage is mostly irrelevant. It’s worth buying if off-road use is genuine — not for the look alone, given the $72,000 price tag.
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Safety data from NHTSA and IIHS; fuel economy from EPA. Actual mileage varies.
Frequently Asked Questions
What engine comes with each F-150 trim? XL and XLT can be ordered with the 2.7L EcoBoost V6, 3.5L EcoBoost V6, 5.0L V8, or PowerBoost hybrid (3.5L hybrid, XL/XLT excluded). Lariat and above offer all engines. Raptor uses the 3.5L High-Output twin-turbo standard.
Which F-150 trim is best for towing? Any trim with the Max Trailer Tow Package and the 3.5L EcoBoost reaches 14,000 pounds towing capacity. The package includes a bigger receiver hitch, Pro Trailer Backup Assist, and upgraded cooling.
Is the F-150 Raptor good for daily driving? Yes — the Raptor’s Fox shocks absorb road imperfections well and the interior is comfortable. The compromises are fuel economy (~15 mpg combined) and parking width due to the wider track.
Browse F-150 inventory at Levittown Ford to see what’s in stock across the full trim range.
Visit Levittown Ford to compare trims in person: