
F-150 5th-Wheel Towing Capacity
Yes—a properly equipped 2025 F-150 can be configured for 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing, but the limits are lower than max conventional towing and the setup is very bed-length and trailer-design dependent.
Key Ford notes to know up front:
- 5th-wheel towing is not recommended for Raptor or Lightning models.
- 5.5′ bed trucks can accept a 5th-wheel hitch, but most 5th-wheel trailer designs are not compatible with this model.
- For 5th-wheel/gooseneck, Ford’s selector uses king pin load assumptions (15% of loaded trailer weight) and requires staying under rear GAWR/GVWR and GCWR.
📊 2025 F-150 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing limits (by engine)
Maximum loaded trailer weight varies by axle ratio, cab/bed, wheelbase, drivetrain, and options—use these as “ceiling” references and confirm the exact line for your truck.
| Engine (2025 F-150) | 5th-wheel/gooseneck max (up to) | What to know |
|---|---|---|
| 5.0L V8 | 11,600 lbs | Highest max shown in Ford’s 5th-wheel/gooseneck selector for F-150. |
| 3.5L EcoBoost | 10,900 lbs | Strong max capability, but the exact rating depends heavily on axle/config. |
| 2.7L EcoBoost | 8,300 lbs | Viable for lighter 5th-wheels, still payload-sensitive. |
| 3.5L Hybrid | 7,100 lbs | Ford lists 5th-wheel/gooseneck max values around 7,100/7,000 on the hybrid selector. |
🔧 The simple math that makes or breaks 5th-wheel towing
With a 5th-wheel or gooseneck, you plan around king pin load, not conventional tongue weight.
Ford’s note for 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing:
- Trailer king pin load weight should be 15% of total loaded trailer weight.
- King pin load + passengers + cargo cannot cause vehicle weights to exceed rear GAWR or GVWR, and combined vehicle + trailer cannot exceed GCWR.
Quick estimator:
King pin weight ≈ Loaded trailer weight × 0.15
Example: 8,500-lb loaded 5th-wheel → ~1,275 lbs on the truck before people/gear.
This is why payload is usually the limiting factor long before you hit the “max trailer weight” number.
🧰 Setup checklist (do this before you buy the trailer)
1) Confirm bed length + trailer compatibility
Ford states:
- 5.5′ box can accept a 5th-wheel hitch, but most 5th-wheel trailer designs are not compatible with this model.
Practical implication: short beds can create cab-to-trailer clearance risk on tight turns, often requiring a compatible pin box design and, in some cases, a sliding solution.
2) Confirm model restrictions
- 5th-wheel towing is not recommended for Raptor or Lightning models.
3) Confirm your exact rating line (don’t guess)
Ford provides a dedicated 5th-wheel/gooseneck selector table by engine, axle ratio, cab, wheelbase, and drivetrain.
Use the exact line that matches your build.
4) Confirm tailgate/clearance considerations
Ford provides tailgate clearance guidance and lists an F-150 max tailgate height (4×4) of 58.3 inches in its 5th-wheel/gooseneck considerations section.
This is a reminder that geometry matters—not just rating numbers.
5) Validate payload against king pin load
Use Ford’s 15% king pin assumption and verify you stay within rear GAWR/GVWR.
✅ “Should I even do a 5th-wheel on an F-150?” (decision guide)
Go 5th-wheel/gooseneck with an F-150 if…
- Your trailer’s loaded weight and king pin weight fit comfortably within your payload and axle ratings.
- Your bed length and the trailer’s front cap/pin box design are compatible (especially important on short beds).
Consider a different trailer type (or a heavier-duty truck) if…
- Your estimated king pin load is already consuming most of your payload before passengers and cargo.
- You’re trying to tow a 5th-wheel that pushes into the top end of these limits on a short bed where clearance is tight.
- Ford towing guides hub (calculator + towing resources) Ford Motor Company
- Ford towing calculator (VIN-based towing capacity lookup) Ford Motor Company
❓ FAQs
Can a 2025 F-150 tow a 5th-wheel?
Yes, Ford publishes a dedicated 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing selector for the 2025 F-150, but compatibility depends on configuration and trailer design
What is the max 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing capacity for a 2025 F-150?
Ford’s selector shows maximum loaded trailer weights up to 11,600 lbs on certain 5.0L V8 configurations.
How much king pin weight should I assume?
Ford states: king pin load weight should be 15% of total loaded trailer weight, and payload must support that plus passengers/cargo without exceeding rear GAWR or GVWR.
Can I tow a 5th-wheel with a 5.5-foot bed F-150?
Ford states a 5.5′ bed will accept a 5th-wheel hitch, but most 5th-wheel trailer designs are not compatible with this model
🏁 Conclusion
For 5th-wheel/gooseneck towing, the F-150 can work—if you spec and match carefully.
Use Ford’s 5th-wheel/gooseneck selector lines to confirm your max rating, plan king pin load at 15%, and validate you stay under rear GAWR/GVWR and GCWR
Like and comment with your engine, bed length (5.5/6.5/8), loaded trailer weight, and estimated king pin weight, and I’ll sanity-check your setup against Ford’s selector math and visit us again truckreportgeeks.com