Commercial van buyers in central Minnesota typically have three trucks on their cross-shop list: the 2026 Ford Transit®, the 2026 Ram ProMaster®, and the 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter. All three are full-size commercial vans built primarily for business use — cargo delivery, trades, fleet operations, shuttle service, and commercial body upfit. Each comes from a manufacturer with substantial commercial van history, and each has devoted owner bases. This guide compares the three honestly — calling out where each van wins, where each one loses, and helping you figure out which one fits your work. Ford’s Transit is the best-selling commercial van in America for good reasons, but Ram’s ProMaster and Mercedes’ Sprinter each have legitimate strengths in specific applications. The right answer depends on what you actually need from a commercial van.
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The bottom line on cross-shopping
Before the deep dive, here’s the short answer:
Get the 2026 Ford Transit if: you want the most engine and powertrain choice in the segment (gas PFDi, gas EcoBoost, or fully electric E-Transit), you want AWD available with gas engines (genuinely useful for central MN service work), you want a fully electric option (E-Transit), you’re a tradesperson who wants factory Trade Packages (Electrician, HVAC, General Contractor), you value the U.S. dealer service network with local support, or you simply want the best-selling commercial van in America with the broadest configuration options.
Get the 2026 Ram ProMaster if: you want the lowest starting price in the segment, you want maximum cargo space (up to 524 cu ft), you value front-wheel drive for FWD traction characteristics and the lower bed floor it provides, you want the 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty, your operation is primarily urban or paved-road service where AWD isn’t a priority, or you specifically prefer FWD over rear-wheel drive layouts.
Get the 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter if: you want diesel powertrain (fuel economy under load, longer range, higher torque), you want premium interior and brand experience, you want maximum cargo length (170-inch extended wheelbase), you want maximum towing capacity (up to 7,500 lbs), you want highest maximum payload (up to 6,812 lbs on 4500 series), you operate long-haul routes where diesel range matters, or you value the Mercedes-Benz brand for client-facing or hospitality applications.
All three are good commercial vans. Each has been in the segment for years, each has refined platforms, and each has devoted owner bases. The differences come down to specific priorities — engine and drivetrain options, cargo dimensions, technology preferences, brand experience, and budget.
Engine and powertrain comparison
Side-by-side engine specs:
2026 Ford Transit engines:
- 3.5L PFDi V6 Gas — 275 hp / 260 lb-ft (naturally aspirated, port-fuel/direct-injection)
- 3.5L EcoBoost V6 Gas — 310 hp / 400 lb-ft (twin-turbocharged)
- E-Transit Electric — 89 kWh battery, 266 hp / 317 lb-ft, up to 159 miles estimated range
- 10-speed SelectShift automatic transmission on gas engines
2026 Ram ProMaster engine:
- 3.6L Pentastar V6 Gas — 276 hp / 250-260 lb-ft (naturally aspirated)
- 9-speed TorqueFlite automatic transmission
- No diesel option, no electric option
2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter engines:
- 2.0L 4-cylinder turbo Diesel (standard output) — 168-170 hp / 295 lb-ft
- 2.0L 4-cylinder turbo Diesel (high output) — 208-211 hp / 332 lb-ft
- 2.0L 4-cylinder turbo Gas — available as alternative to diesel
- 9G-TRONIC 9-speed automatic transmission
- No electric option in U.S. lineup (Sprinter eDrive available in Europe)
Powertrain takeaways:
- Most engine choice: Ford Transit. Three powertrains (PFDi gas, EcoBoost gas, electric E-Transit). Sprinter offers two (standard diesel and HO diesel, plus available gas). ProMaster offers one (Pentastar V6 gas).
- Highest gas horsepower: Ford Transit 3.5L EcoBoost. 310 hp beats Ram’s 276 hp and Mercedes’ 211 hp HO diesel.
- Highest gas torque: Ford Transit 3.5L EcoBoost. 400 lb-ft beats Ram’s 250-260 lb-ft and Mercedes’ 332 lb-ft HO diesel.
- Lowest gas horsepower: Mercedes Sprinter diesel. The diesel-focused Sprinter lineup has lower peak power than gas alternatives, though torque-focused design and 9-speed transmission compensate for many applications.
- Diesel only on Sprinter. Ford and Ram are gas-focused; Sprinter is the diesel choice in the segment.
- Electric only on Ford. E-Transit is the only fully electric option among the three major commercial vans.
For more on the Transit’s specific powertrain options — including the gas vs E-Transit electric decision framework and RWD vs AWD considerations — see our 2026 Ford Transit engines and E-Transit guide.
Drivetrain — FWD vs RWD vs AWD
Drivetrain configuration is one of the biggest practical differences between the three vans:
Ford Transit:
- RWD standard on all configurations
- AWD (Intelligent All-Wheel Drive) available with gas engines
- E-Transit is RWD only
- AWD doesn’t raise the load floor or seat height
Ram ProMaster:
- FWD (Front-Wheel Drive) only — no RWD or AWD option
- FWD allows a lower bed floor (no transmission tunnel in the rear)
- FWD provides traction advantages on flat surfaces, particularly when loaded
- Best-in-class turning diameter of 36 feet (advantage of FWD layout)
- No AWD option means buyers needing 4-wheel traction must look elsewhere
Mercedes Sprinter:
- RWD standard
- 4MATIC AWD (4WD) available — particularly capable system, more robust than typical commercial van AWD
- 4MATIC available across more configurations for 2026 than previous model years
- AWD raises the load floor slightly compared to RWD on Sprinter
Drivetrain takeaways:
- Only Ford and Mercedes offer AWD. ProMaster is FWD only.
- ProMaster’s FWD advantage: lower bed floor. Easier loading, lower cargo height, better for some upfit applications.
- Sprinter’s AWD advantage: most capable 4WD system. 4MATIC is more robust than typical van AWD systems — closer to truck-level 4WD capability.
- Ford’s AWD advantage: doesn’t affect load floor. Same load floor height as RWD configuration.
- For central MN winter service work, Ford or Sprinter AWD beats ProMaster FWD. AWD provides better traction on snow-covered or rural unmaintained roads where FWD can struggle, particularly with empty cargo bays (lighter rear axle).
Electric options
The fully electric commercial van market is led by Ford’s E-Transit:
2026 Ford E-Transit:
- 89 kWh High-Voltage Battery
- 266 hp electric motor / 317 lb-ft torque
- Up to 159 miles estimated range
- RWD only
- DC fast charging up to 115 kW
- Vapor Injection Heat Pump standard for 2026 (improves cold-weather efficiency)
- Available across Cargo Van, Chassis Cab, and Cutaway configurations
- 156-inch WB CC/CA new for 2026 (late availability)
- Single Onboard Charger standard for 2026; Dual Onboard Chargers optional (65C)
- 8-year/100,000-mile battery warranty
- Eligible for federal commercial electric vehicle tax credits (subject to qualification)
Ram ProMaster: no fully electric option in the U.S. lineup. Stellantis (Ram’s parent company) has produced ProMaster EV variants for European markets and announced plans for North American electric commercial vans, but the 2026 U.S. ProMaster lineup is gas-only.
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter: no fully electric option in the U.S. lineup. The eSprinter (Sprinter electric) is sold in European markets but not yet available in the U.S.
Electric takeaway: for buyers wanting a fully electric commercial van in the U.S. market, the E-Transit is currently the only major option. For operations with the right profile (local routes, overnight charging access, AWD not required), the E-Transit can pay back through lower operating costs and federal tax credits. For operations that don’t fit E-Transit’s constraints, gas Transit, gas ProMaster, or diesel Sprinter are the alternatives.
Cargo capacity and dimensions
Maximum cargo capacities:
- Ford Transit max cargo: approximately 487 cubic feet (High Roof Extended Long Length configuration)
- Ram ProMaster max cargo: 524 cubic feet (Super High Roof 159" WB Extended Floor configuration)
- Mercedes Sprinter max cargo: 533 cubic feet (170-inch Extended Wheelbase High Roof configuration)
Roof height comparison:
- Ford Transit roof options: Low Roof, Medium Roof, High Roof
- Ram ProMaster roof options: Standard Roof (66 inches interior height), High Roof (77 inches), Super High Roof (86 inches)
- Mercedes Sprinter roof options: Standard Roof (67.7 inches standing height), High Roof (79.1 inches standing height)
Wheelbase and length options:
- Ford Transit: 130-inch and 148-inch wheelbase Cargo Van; 156-inch and 178-inch wheelbase Chassis Cab/Cutaway; three overall lengths (Regular, Long, Extended Long)
- Ram ProMaster: 118-inch, 136-inch, 159-inch wheelbase options; cargo length up to 13 feet
- Mercedes Sprinter: 144-inch and 170-inch wheelbase options; up to 533 cu ft in 170" Extended Wheelbase
Cargo takeaways:
- Mercedes Sprinter has the largest maximum cargo volume at 533 cu ft — advantage of approximately 9 cu ft over ProMaster and 46 cu ft over Transit at maximum configurations.
- Ram ProMaster has the tallest Super High Roof at 86 inches interior height — best for buyers needing maximum vertical workspace.
- Ford Transit has the most diverse roof height options across three distinct heights — better fit for buyers needing specific intermediate heights.
- ProMaster’s lower load floor (FWD advantage) makes loading easier even with similar total cargo volume.
- For maximum cargo volume, Sprinter wins. For specific intermediate roof heights, Transit offers more options. For tallest interior workspace, ProMaster Super High Roof wins.
For complete Transit Cargo Van dimensions and configurations, see our 2026 Ford Transit Cargo Van capability guide.
Payload and towing comparison
Maximum payload capacities:
- Ford Transit max payload: approximately 4,085 lbs (Low Roof configuration; varies by exact spec)
- Ram ProMaster max payload: 4,820 lbs (when properly equipped)
- Mercedes Sprinter max payload: 6,812 lbs (4500 series; varies by series and configuration)
Maximum towing capacities:
- Ford Transit max towing: 4,500 lbs (with Heavy-Duty Trailer Tow Package and 3.5L EcoBoost V6)
- Ram ProMaster max towing: 6,910 lbs (when properly equipped)
- Mercedes Sprinter max towing: 7,500 lbs (when properly equipped, specific heavy-duty configurations)
Payload and towing takeaways:
- Highest max payload: Mercedes Sprinter at 6,812 lbs (4500 series). Substantial advantage over ProMaster (4,820 lbs) and Transit (4,085 lbs).
- Highest max towing: Mercedes Sprinter at 7,500 lbs.
- Lowest tow rating: Ford Transit at 4,500 lbs — meaningfully less than ProMaster (6,910 lbs) or Sprinter (7,500 lbs).
- For buyers needing maximum payload or towing, Sprinter is the right answer. Sprinter’s heavy-duty 4500 series configurations exceed what Ford Transit or Ram ProMaster offer.
- For most general commercial van use cases, all three vans handle typical payload requirements. The payload and towing advantage of Sprinter matters most for buyers actually approaching those maximums.
Practical perspective: the Transit is built primarily as a cargo van — towing capability is secondary. For buyers who tow occasionally within the 4,500-lb rating (smaller equipment trailers, side-by-side trailers, snowmobile trailers), the Transit is plenty. For buyers who need substantial towing capability (larger equipment trailers, larger cargo trailers, occasional commercial towing), Sprinter is the right answer. For buyers needing serious towing (over 7,500 lbs) or trailers with heavy gooseneck/fifth-wheel weight, none of these vans is the right answer — consider the Ford Super Duty or F-150 instead.
Technology and safety features
All three vans include substantial technology and safety features. The differences are in specific implementations:
Ford Transit technology (2026):
- SYNC 4 with 12-inch center display standard (new for 2026)
- All-new 8-inch cluster display
- Ford Co-Pilot360 standard on all series (Lane-Keeping System, Auto High Beam Headlamps, Pre-Collision Assist with Automatic Emergency Braking, Intersection Assist, Forward Sensing System, Reverse Sensing System)
- Ford Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 standard on Passenger Van XLT, optional elsewhere (Adaptive Cruise with Stop-and-Go, Lane Centering, 360-Degree Camera, BLIS with Cross-Traffic Alert)
- 5G modem with over-the-air update capability
- Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto
- Keyless push-button Start standard
- Ford Pro fleet management telematics integration
Ram ProMaster technology (2026):
- Touchscreen infotainment (size varies by trim)
- Forward Collision Warning with Active Braking and Pedestrian/Cyclist Emergency Braking
- Apple CarPlay and Android Auto
- Available driver-assist features
- Standard safety equipment
- Note: 2026 ProMaster reviewers describe interior tech as more basic than competitors
Mercedes-Benz Sprinter technology (2026):
- MBUX infotainment system with 10.25-inch touchscreen
- Wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto
- “Hey Mercedes” voice control
- Active Brake Assist
- Mercedes-Me Connect telematics for fleet management
- Updated MBUX system for 2026 with enhanced features
- Available navigation and voice control
- Premium materials and interior trim
Technology takeaways:
- Most comprehensive driver-assist suite: Ford Transit. Ford Co-Pilot360 standard across all series, with Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 standard on Passenger Van XLT — substantially more standard driver-assist than ProMaster.
- Most premium interior and infotainment: Mercedes Sprinter. MBUX system with voice control and premium materials reflects Mercedes brand positioning.
- Most basic technology: Ram ProMaster. Reviewers consistently describe ProMaster tech as adequate but more basic than competitors.
- Best fleet management integration: Ford Pro (Transit) and Mercedes-Me Connect (Sprinter). Both offer comprehensive fleet telematics platforms. ProMaster fleet management is more limited.
Pricing and warranty
Approximate starting prices (Cargo Van base, varies significantly by configuration):
- Ram ProMaster: starting approximately $48,965 base (Tradesman trim)
- Ford Transit: starting price comparable to ProMaster — configurations vary widely
- Mercedes-Benz Sprinter: starting approximately $53,125 base (Cargo Van, 2500 series)
Standard warranty coverage:
- Ford Transit: 3-year/36,000-mile basic warranty; 5-year/60,000-mile powertrain warranty
- Ram ProMaster: 3-year/36,000-mile basic warranty; 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty (America’s Best Full-Size Truck Powertrain Limited Warranty on select 2026 Ram trucks and vans)
- Mercedes-Benz Sprinter: 3-year/36,000-mile basic warranty; 5-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty
E-Transit battery warranty: 8 years/100,000 miles.
Pricing and warranty takeaways:
- Lowest starting price: Ram ProMaster. $48,965 base typically beats Ford Transit and Mercedes Sprinter base configurations.
- Highest starting price: Mercedes Sprinter. $53,125 base reflects premium positioning and standard equipment level.
- Best powertrain warranty: Ram ProMaster. 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty is substantially longer than Ford’s 5-year/60,000-mile or Sprinter’s 5-year/100,000-mile coverage. Real value for buyers keeping vehicles long-term.
- Ford and Sprinter offer comparable basic warranty. 3-year/36,000-mile basic; differences in powertrain coverage.
Central Minnesota considerations
Several MN-specific factors for commercial van buyers:
Local service and parts availability. Jay Malone Ford has been the Ford dealer in Hutchinson since 2005. We service what we sell — warranty work, regular maintenance, snow plow installation, parts — all here in McLeod County. For ProMaster buyers, the nearest Ram commercial van service is in surrounding cities. For Sprinter buyers, Mercedes-Benz commercial vehicle service is even more limited in central MN — Twin Cities-area Mercedes-Benz dealers are typically the closest options. For buyers who value local dealer support for warranty work, regular service, and parts availability, that’s a real factor in favor of the Transit.
Cold-weather operation. All three vans operate in MN winters, but with different characteristics:
- Ford Transit gas: reliable cold-weather starting with Engine Block Heater available. AWD configuration handles winter rural service work confidently.
- Ford E-Transit: cold-weather range loss is real (typically 20-30% reduction at sub-zero temperatures), though 2026’s Vapor Injection Heat Pump standard improves cold-weather efficiency. Plan for reduced winter range.
- Ram ProMaster: gas-only operation, FWD-only drivetrain. Cold-weather starting reliable with gas engine. FWD traction works on flat winter roads but FWD-only means no AWD option for rural service work.
- Mercedes Sprinter diesel: diesel cold-start considerations apply (more sensitive to extreme cold than gas). Block heater use recommended for buyers parking outside. 4MATIC AWD provides excellent winter traction.
Rural service work in central MN. McLeod County, Meeker County, Renville County service operations reaching customers on rural gravel roads benefit substantially from AWD. Ford Transit (AWD available with EcoBoost) and Mercedes Sprinter (4MATIC AWD) handle this work well. Ram ProMaster (FWD only) doesn’t offer AWD — works for paved-road urban operations but lacks the traction confidence for serious rural service work.
Long highway runs. The Hutchinson-to-Twin Cities commute, Hutchinson-to-Sauk Centre, Hutchinson-to-Sioux Falls, or any extended highway operation favors different vans for different reasons. The Sprinter’s diesel fuel economy under load makes long-haul economics meaningful. The Transit gas EcoBoost handles long highway runs comfortably with the 31-gallon fuel tank option. The ProMaster works for long-haul operations within its FWD limitations.
Fuel infrastructure. Standard #2 diesel is widely available throughout central MN at major fuel stations along Highway 7, US-12, and MN-15. DEF (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) for Sprinter buyers is also widely available. Gas is universally available. For E-Transit buyers, DC fast charging is available at major stations along I-94 and I-35; rely on home or depot Level 2 charging for daily operations.
Ag and rural operations. Central MN ag and rural service operations split among Ford Transit, Ram ProMaster, and occasional Sprinter use. The Transit’s AWD option, factory Trade Packages, and U.S. dealer support make it the volume choice for these operations. ProMaster’s lower price point and FWD layout appeal to buyers running primarily paved-road operations. Sprinter use is more limited in rural ag applications due to higher cost and limited central MN service network.
Which van fits which buyer?
Specific buyer profiles:
Tradesperson wanting factory Trade Packages (Electrician, HVAC, General Contractor). 2026 Ford Transit. Ford’s factory Trade Packages (66K, 66L, 66M, now available in Extended Long Length for 2026) are the most comprehensive factory trade upfit in the segment. Aftermarket Trade Package equivalents on ProMaster and Sprinter require body builder coordination and higher cost.
Buyer wanting electric commercial van. 2026 Ford E-Transit. Currently the only fully electric commercial van available in the U.S. market from these three manufacturers.
Buyer wanting lowest acquisition cost. 2026 Ram ProMaster Tradesman. Starting around $48,965, the ProMaster is consistently the lowest-priced option in the segment. Best fit for fleet operators focused on cost and operations not requiring AWD.
Buyer wanting maximum payload or towing. 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter, specifically heavier-duty 3500XD or 4500 series with diesel powertrain. Up to 6,812 lbs payload and 7,500 lbs towing exceeds Transit and ProMaster maximums substantially.
Buyer wanting AWD for central MN winter service. 2026 Ford Transit (with EcoBoost) or 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter (with 4MATIC). Both offer capable AWD; ProMaster doesn’t. Choose Transit for U.S. dealer network and broader configuration options; choose Sprinter for premium experience and 4MATIC’s more capable system.
Electrical contractor with high-roof, fully-equipped trade van. 2026 Ford Transit High Roof LWB-EL Cargo Van with Electrician Trade Package (66K), 3.5L EcoBoost V6, AWD, Pro Power Onboard 2.4 kW. The most cost-effective path to a factory-equipped electrician’s van.
Last-mile delivery operation with overnight depot charging. 2026 Ford E-Transit Cargo Van. Lower fuel costs, lower maintenance costs, federal tax credits, quiet operation for residential delivery.
School district running activity transport. 2026 Ford Transit Passenger Van XL with 15-passenger seating and School Bus Prep Package (47C). Ford’s standard Co-Pilot360 plus AWD availability make it the practical choice. Sprinter Passenger Van offers premium experience but at substantially higher cost; ProMaster Passenger configurations are more limited.
Hotel and airport shuttle operation. 2026 Ford Transit Passenger Van XLT or 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter Passenger Van. Choose Transit XLT for cost-effective premium passenger transport with Co-Pilot360 Assist 2.0 standard; choose Sprinter for premium Mercedes-Benz brand experience and more refined interior. Premium hotel and luxury hospitality operations sometimes prefer Sprinter for brand alignment.
Mobile mechanic with custom shop upfit. 2026 Ford Transit High Roof LWB-EL Cargo Van with 3.5L EcoBoost V6, available 250 amp Dual Alternator, Pro Power Onboard 2.4 kW, AWD optional, aftermarket workspace shelving.
Plumber with custom shelving. 2026 Ford Transit High Roof LWB-EL Cargo Van with Shelving Package (66H) plus aftermarket plumbing-specific additions, 3.5L EcoBoost V6, AWD optional.
Camper van conversion enthusiast. 2026 Ford Transit High Roof LWB-EL Cargo Van with 3.5L EcoBoost V6, AWD optional, ready for aftermarket conversion. Sprinter is also popular for camper van conversions due to diesel range advantages and 4MATIC AWD — choose Sprinter for buyers prioritizing diesel range and premium build quality for the conversion.
Commercial box truck conversion. 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter Cab Chassis (Class 3) for buyers wanting maximum capability and premium interior. Ford Transit Cutaway for buyers wanting U.S. dealer support and broader configuration options. ProMaster Cutaway for cost-focused buyers.
Heavy commercial operation needing maximum payload. 2026 Mercedes-Benz Sprinter 3500XD or 4500 series with diesel. The Transit and ProMaster maximum payload ratings don’t match Sprinter’s heavy-duty configurations.
Buyer who can’t decide. Drive all three. The vans have substantially different driving feels — FWD ProMaster handles very differently from RWD/AWD Transit and Sprinter. Diesel Sprinter feels different from gas Transit or ProMaster. Spec sheets only get you so far — a real test drive in your actual operating environment usually makes the right answer clear.
Key Takeaways
- Three major commercial van competitors in the U.S. market: Ford Transit, Ram ProMaster, Mercedes-Benz Sprinter.
- Most engine choice: Ford Transit (gas PFDi, gas EcoBoost, electric E-Transit). ProMaster gas-only; Sprinter diesel-focused with gas available.
- Only electric commercial van in U.S.: Ford E-Transit.
- AWD available: Ford Transit (Intelligent AWD with gas) and Mercedes Sprinter (4MATIC). ProMaster FWD only.
- Highest maximum cargo: Mercedes Sprinter (533 cu ft) > Ram ProMaster (524 cu ft) > Ford Transit (487 cu ft).
- Highest maximum payload: Mercedes Sprinter (6,812 lbs 4500 series) > Ram ProMaster (4,820 lbs) > Ford Transit (~4,085 lbs).
- Highest maximum towing: Mercedes Sprinter (7,500 lbs) > Ram ProMaster (6,910 lbs) > Ford Transit (4,500 lbs).
- Lowest starting price: Ram ProMaster (~$48,965).
- Best powertrain warranty: Ram ProMaster (10-year/100,000-mile).
- Most comprehensive standard driver-assist: Ford Transit (Co-Pilot360 standard on all series).
- Premium interior and infotainment: Mercedes Sprinter (MBUX system).
- Best for central MN: Ford Transit (local Hutchinson dealer service, AWD available, U.S. dealer network, broadest configuration options).
- For tradespeople wanting factory Trade Packages, electric option, AWD, or U.S. dealer support: Transit.
- For maximum payload, towing, or diesel: Sprinter.
- For lowest cost or longest powertrain warranty: ProMaster.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the Ram ProMaster’s 10-year warranty a real advantage?
For buyers keeping vehicles long-term, yes. The 10-year/100,000-mile powertrain warranty is substantially longer than Ford’s 5-year/60,000-mile or Mercedes’ 5-year/100,000-mile coverage. For commercial operators putting on high mileage, the powertrain coverage matters — transmission, engine, and powertrain repairs are the most expensive items. For buyers selling vehicles before 5 years or 60,000 miles, the warranty difference matters less. For long-haul commercial operators, fleet operators rotating vehicles every 5-7 years, and businesses that keep vehicles 10+ years, the ProMaster warranty is a real consideration in the total cost of ownership calculation.
Why does Mercedes Sprinter cost more than Ford Transit or Ram ProMaster?
Premium positioning, premium materials, premium technology (MBUX infotainment system, Mercedes-level interior trim), Mercedes-Benz brand premium, and higher-capability heavy-duty configurations (Sprinter 3500XD and 4500 series exceed Transit and ProMaster maximums on payload and towing). For some applications, the higher cost is justified through capability, refinement, or brand alignment. For most general commercial van use cases (cargo delivery, trades, fleet operations), the Transit or ProMaster deliver comparable practical capability at lower cost. The Sprinter premium is most justified for premium passenger transport, heavy-duty payload requirements, and operations where Mercedes-Benz brand alignment matters.
Is FWD on the ProMaster a disadvantage in MN winters?
Depends on use. FWD provides decent traction on flat roads and works reasonably well in winter conditions when the cargo bay is loaded (weight on the driving axle helps). FWD struggles when the cargo bay is empty (very little weight on driving axle) and on uphill operation in snowy conditions (the unloaded rear can lift, reducing traction). For central MN service operations reaching customers on rural gravel roads in winter, AWD provides more confidence than FWD. For urban paved-road operations, FWD works fine. The ProMaster is the right answer for cost-focused urban operations; for serious winter rural service, Ford Transit AWD or Mercedes Sprinter 4MATIC are more capable.
Can Jay Malone Ford service Ram ProMaster or Mercedes Sprinter?
Our service department is Ford-certified and primarily focused on Ford vehicles. For some routine maintenance on other makes (oil changes, tires, brakes, general mechanical work), we can service many makes — call us at (320) 587-4748 to confirm. For warranty work on ProMaster, you’ll need a Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep/Ram dealer. For warranty work on Sprinter, you’ll need a Mercedes-Benz commercial vehicle dealer. For buyers choosing between commercial van options in central MN, the convenience of local Ford service in Hutchinson is genuinely valuable — for ProMaster or Sprinter owners, warranty work and specialty service typically requires traveling to surrounding cities or Twin Cities-area dealers.
Does the Sprinter’s diesel really save money in the long run?
Depends on use. Diesel fuel economy under load is typically 30-50% better than equivalent gas operation, which translates to meaningful fuel savings for buyers running high mileage. For commercial operations putting on 20,000+ miles per year, the diesel fuel economy advantage can recoup the higher Sprinter acquisition cost over 5-7 years. For lower-mileage operations (under 15,000 miles per year), the diesel premium is harder to recover. Other diesel considerations: DEF (Diesel Exhaust Fluid) refills required, diesel maintenance is typically more expensive than gas, and diesel fuel cost varies by location (sometimes more expensive than gas, sometimes comparable). For long-haul commercial operations, diesel typically pays back. For light-duty in-town service operations, gas Transit or ProMaster is often the more economical choice.
Should I buy a Nissan NV Cargo Van instead of these three?
The Nissan NV (full-size cargo van) was discontinued in the U.S. market in 2021. Nissan no longer sells full-size commercial vans in North America. If you’re looking at a Nissan NV today, you’re looking at used vehicles. For new commercial van purchase, the three main options in the U.S. market are Ford Transit, Ram ProMaster, and Mercedes-Benz Sprinter. Nissan still sells smaller commercial-oriented vehicles in some markets, but the full-size NV is no longer a current new-vehicle option.
What about the Chevrolet Express or GMC Savana?
The Chevrolet Express and GMC Savana are older-platform full-size commercial vans that GM continues to produce. Same fundamental vehicle, different badging. The Express/Savana platform is older than Transit, ProMaster, or Sprinter — technology, fuel economy, and interior refinement reflect the older platform design. The Express offers a 6.6L V8 gas engine (different powertrain approach than the competitors) and traditional body-on-frame construction. For specific commercial fleet operations, school district transport, or buyers preferring GM products, the Express/Savana remains in production and continues to find buyers. For most cross-shopping, the comparison between Ford Transit, Ram ProMaster, and Mercedes Sprinter covers the current-generation commercial van segment.
Test Drive a 2026 Transit at Jay Malone Ford
If you’re cross-shopping Transit, ProMaster, and Sprinter, the best way to decide is to test drive at least the Transit at our Hutchinson showroom and compare to others nearby. Come down to Highway 7 and we’ll walk through the configuration options, talk through your operation specifics (routes, loads, upfit plans, charging infrastructure if E-Transit), and help you figure out the right Transit for your work. We can pull exact specs and configurations from Ford’s documents for any specific build you’re considering.
If we don’t have your exact configuration in stock, we’ll either pull one from another dealer at no extra charge or place a factory order through Ford. Same price either way — that’s how we’ve operated since 2005, and that’s the local service commitment that comes with buying from Jay Malone Ford.
About the Author
I’m Jordan Malone-Forst, Assistant General Manager at Jay Malone Motors in Hutchinson, MN. I’m proud to be part of the family business my dad Jay started in 2005 — and even prouder to serve the community I grew up in. When I’m not at the dealership, you’ll find me involved with the Hutchinson Ambassadors and Chamber of Commerce. If you have questions about any Ford vehicle or want to talk through your options, reach out — I’d love to help.