THE FIRST TIME I SAW A TRANSIT CONNECT used as full-time living space was at the 2014 Rubber Tramp Rendezvous. A guy named Randy had done an attractive and very functional conversion. I’ve seen many nomad Transit Connects since then. They’ve become a popular choice, especially as they became more plentiful on the used car market.

After this model year, the used car market will be the only place to buy a Transit Connect, because Ford has announced it will stop selling the compact van in North America. The Ram Promaster City, Nissan NV200/Chevrolet City Express, and Mercedes-Benz Metris have already been discontinued here because of declining sales, the move to electrification, and so on.

This isn’t totally tragic news, because few of us nomads could afford a showroom-new Transit Connect anyway. But it means these small commercial vans will become harder to find in the future — the same way healthy low mileage Astros and Safaris are today. It can complicate your plans for launching your nomad life. The selection gets smaller while you’re saving up to buy one.

You could go with one of the other compact vans, but the Transit Connect is in that sweet spot of having a better reliability record than the Ram, more room than the Nissan and Chevy, and a lower price than the Mercedes. Or you might go with a different type of vehicle, like a crossover.

So here’s a toast to the Transit Connect. May the remaining ones live long enough for all the nomads who want one to acquire their own.