Upfitting Trends: Adapting to a Rapidly Evolving Market


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As we move through the final quarter of 2025, we seem to be at a unique moment in time for the work truck industry. The push to electrify everything – driven in part by government incentives and regulations – appears to have run into a brick wall of reality that customer preferences have not changed that quickly and battery technology is just not ready for all but the simplest work truck applications. Meanwhile, technology-driven safety features are reaching maturity. Advanced visibility systems, integrated lighting, and smart safety hardware are becoming standard equipment on many fleet builds. And artificial intelligence has only begun to influence the design and production of work trucks, not to mention the sales and support functions.

The Electrification Reality Check

While government regulations and manufacturer commitments have made EV adoption seem inevitable, the reality on the ground is not so cut-and-dried. Though there are some viable electric solutions for light-duty applications, the technology to support medium-duty platforms is still not ready for prime time. At the same time, most fleet managers don’t want to sacrifice any of the work truck features and functionality they have become accustomed to, but the weight restrictions and power requirements of EVs demand a wholesale new approach to design and production.

“We’re seeing customers who want to go electric but need us to help them understand what’s actually possible,” notes Mike Scelzi, founder of Scelzi Enterprises. “An electric chassis changes everything about how we approach weight distribution, auxiliary power, and even tool storage. It’s not just swapping engines, although some well-meaning government regulations seem to have been written with that faulty thinking in mind.”

The Need For More Creativity

At Scelzi Enterprises, engineering and production teams are getting more creative. Combining unique build designs with accessories like cranes and liftgates along with specialized workspaces and custom toolbox configurations. “We are hearing more requests for customized body layouts that go well beyond our standard builds,” states Mike Scelzi. “We are happy to make those customizations, though it puts time pressures on our design team. But our team loves the challenge, and the end results have been some incredible truck bodies.”

Safety Takes Center Stage

Today’s upfit designs increasingly focus on technician safety and ergonomics. The old model of workers climbing in and out of cargo areas multiple times per day is giving way to innovative solutions where equipment comes to the technician. Slide-out drawers, rotating tool boards, and drop-down workstations are becoming common rather than unique features.

This safety focus extends to advanced driver assistance systems integration. Modern upfits must accommodate cameras, sensors, and radar systems without compromising their effectiveness—a delicate balance that requires close collaboration between body builders and chassis manufacturers.

Scelzi Beats Industry Lead Times While Others Struggle

Supply chain problems have eased since the 2020-21 pandemic peak, but most truck upfitters still face long wait times. Scelzi is an exception. By investing in their own equipment and streamlining workflows, Scelzi has achieved remarkably fast turnaround times.

Current Lead Times
Body StyleLead Time*
Standard Service Bodies & Flatbeds1-3 workdays
Service Bodies with custom accessories5 workdays
Dump Truck bodiesUp to 11 workdays
2,000-gallon Water TrucksUp to 15 workdays
*Measured from the day the chassis cab arrives at the factory until it’s ready for delivery

These industry-leading speeds come from a commitment to in-house manufacturing and continuous process improvements and internal systems – resulting in customers getting their work trucks faster.

Looking Ahead

As 2026 approaches, the work truck body industry appears to stand at the brink of a new world of possibilities. The successful manufacturers will be those who embrace change while maintaining build quality and customer focus. For companies like Scelzi Enterprises, with over 46 years of experience navigating industry shifts, the current transformation represents just another chapter in the ongoing story of American innovation and craftsmanship.

At Scelzi, and for those other upfitters that plan on surviving and thriving through the rest of this decade, the commercial work truck isn’t just evolving—it’s being reinvented, one upfit at a time.