Used Ford Ranger
Mid-size · 27 listings · max towing 7,500 lb · max payload 1,860 lb
The Ford Ranger on the used market
Ford reintroduced the Ranger to North America for the 2019 model year after an eight-year hiatus, using a globally-developed platform shared with markets where mid-size trucks dominate. The Ranger is a no-nonsense, work-capable mid-size with class-competitive towing.
2019–2020 Rangers depreciate faster than F-150s, so used pricing is attractive. The 2024 redesign should accelerate depreciation on first-gen North American Rangers.
Available trims
Browse by model year
Click into any year for engine specs, towing/payload, fuel economy, common issues, and the used market value range for that model year.
Engine options across model years
| From model year | Available powertrains |
|---|---|
| 2019+ | 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
| 2024+ | 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) · 2.7L EcoBoost V6 (315 hp / 400 lb-ft) · 3.0L EcoBoost V6 (405 hp / 430 lb-ft, Raptor) |
Common issues to inspect for
- 10-speed transmission shudder on early 2019 builds
- Driveshaft vibration recall (2019)
- Lane-keep system overactivity on early models
Where the inventory is
Featured Ranger listings
| Year & Trim | Body | Miles | Price | State |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2021 Lariat 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 67,154 mi | $14,395 | Massachusetts |
| 2019 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Regular Cab | 112,596 mi | $11,523 | Michigan |
| 2021 XL 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 54,730 mi | $17,105 | Illinois |
| 2022 XL 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 48,656 mi | $22,252 | Kansas |
| 2022 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 41,616 mi | $21,662 | Louisiana |
| 2023 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Regular Cab | 39,174 mi | $24,730 | Maryland |
| 2020 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Regular Cab | 66,986 mi | $12,671 | Minnesota |
| 2020 Lariat 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 80,992 mi | $13,982 | New Mexico |
| 2020 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 68,603 mi | $16,167 | Oklahoma |
| 2022 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 38,249 mi | $22,252 | Rhode Island |
| 2024 Raptor 3.0L EcoBoost V6 (405 hp / 430 lb-ft, Raptor) |
Regular Cab | 27,269 mi | $25,561 | Texas |
| 2021 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 58,503 mi | $14,564 | West Virginia |
| 2021 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Regular Cab | 76,802 mi | $14,395 | Arkansas |
| 2020 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 102,857 mi | $12,380 | Arkansas |
| 2021 XLT 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 50,562 mi | $15,242 | Illinois |
| 2022 Lariat 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Regular Cab | 41,841 mi | $18,905 | Nebraska |
| 2022 Raptor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 50,359 mi | $22,055 | Nevada |
| 2019 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 62,160 mi | $11,273 | Ohio |
| 2019 Tremor 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Extended Cab | 84,056 mi | $11,022 | South Carolina |
| 2022 Lariat 2.3L EcoBoost I4 (270 hp / 310 lb-ft) |
Crew Cab | 40,758 mi | $19,495 | Washington |
Buying a used Ford Ranger — what to know
The Ranger sits in the mid-size segment, where competition is fierce and used pricing varies widely by configuration, mileage, and region. The single biggest variable on used pricing is powertrain — diesel-engined trucks of any year typically command a 15–30% premium over equivalent gas trucks, even after accounting for the higher fuel cost per mile. Use the year-by-year breakdown above to confirm which powertrains were even available in the model year you are shopping.
Trim level matters next. The trim ladder for the Ranger runs from work-spec base trims (vinyl seats, rubber floors, manual windows on older years) up through luxury-class top trims with leather, large infotainment, advanced driver assists, and air suspension. The depreciation curve on top trims is steeper than on mid-range trims, which makes 4–6 year old top-trim trucks an unusually strong used value. A 5-year-old top-trim Ranger often costs less than a new mid-trim version with comparable mileage and far less equipment.
Mileage matters but mileage type matters more. A high-mileage Ranger that lived a highway-commuter life is often a better long-term bet than a low-mileage truck that sat in city traffic and short trips its whole life. Ask the seller about usage patterns. Get the answer in writing if it influences your offer. And whatever the seller tells you, verify with a third-party pre-purchase inspection before signing.