
What you need to know:
- Workhorse–InCharge Energy partnership announced at the ACT Expo 2026 to launch a unified EV fleet support program
- Single point of contact for electric fleets covering vehicles, charging infrastructure, and third-party systems to boost uptime and efficiency
- EV specialists and smart issue routing enable faster diagnostics and repairs across OEM, dealer, and charging providers
- Workhorse growth momentum with 1,100+ electric trucks, 20M+ miles, and Q4 2026 rollout of enhanced support
Battery-electric truck maker Workhorse is teaming up with InCharge Energy to roll out a unified support program for fleet customers across North America later this year, the companies announced today at the 2026 ACT Expo.
The partnership will give fleets a single point of contact for issues spanning vehicles, charging infrastructure, electrical systems, and third-party tech.
While branded under Detroit-based Workhorse, the program will be powered by InCharge Energy's technicians, support center, and software platform because doing so will speed up repairs, simplify troubleshooting, and keep electric trucks on the road.
[Related: InCharge Energy names Nikolas Runge as Chief Technology Officer]
The new support line connects Workhorse fleet customers with EV specialists trained across vehicles, charging, and related systems. After an initial diagnosis, issues are routed to the right party—Workhorse field techs for vehicle problems, authorized dealers for upfits, or third-party providers for charging and software—while Workhorse maintains visibility throughout.
It's important to bear in mind that as fleets adopt electrification, pinpointing the source of problems isn't always straightforward. The partnership leans on InCharge Energy's charging expertise to identify root causes faster and resolve issues more efficiently.
Workhorse is on a roll
Workhorse has delivered more than 1,100 battery-electric vehicles, logging over 20 million miles in real-world fleet use. Its Union City, Indiana plant can produce more than 5,000 units annually on a single shift. The company sells through a national dealer network, backed by a factory-certified service and support system.
[Related: Workhorse secures 100-truck order from Gateway Fleets]
Late last year, Workhorse announced it had completed its merger with Motiv Electric Trucks as it eyes a bigger piece of the $23 billion medium-duty BEV market. w
In a letter to shareholders at the time, Workhorse CEO Scott Griffith explained that "Our trucks, buses and shuttles are also a great fit for a large swath of the $23 billion1 medium-duty truck segment. Why? Because the use cases and the duty cycles for our vehicles are in the 'Sweet Spot' for electrification: shorter range and predictable/repeatable routes where depot-based vehicles return for overnight charging, often at lower off-peak electricity rates.
Commenting on today's announcement, Griffith said that "based on the deals we've already announced this year, we project we will experience significant growth in the number of Workhorse vehicles deployed by the end of 2026. This industry-first partnership is a key aspect of our plans to deliver scalable 'first-call' service operations and provide large fleets with what they value most value—high uptime."
The support program is slated to launch in the fourth quarter of 2026. Workhorse says customers and dealers will receive details, including a toll-free number and availability, as the rollout moves forward.
























