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Used pickup trucks for sale in Alaska

5 active listings · average asking price $20,871 · average odometer 80,115 mi · West region

5Active listings
$20,871Avg price
80,115 miAvg mileage
4Brands available

By brand in Alaska

By body style in Alaska

By model year in Alaska

Recent listings in Alaska

Year & ModelBodyMileagePriceCity
2020 Honda Ridgeline
Sport · 3.5L i-VTEC V6 (280 hp / 262 lb-ft)
Extended Cab 57,732 mi $16,992 Anchorage
2022 Ford F-150
XLT · 5.0L Coyote V8 (400 hp / 410 lb-ft)
Regular Cab 36,317 mi $28,729 Wasilla
2017 Nissan Titan
Pro-4X · 5.6L Endurance V8 (390 hp / 394 lb-ft)
Extended Cab 133,557 mi $10,993 Anchorage
2021 Ford F-350 Super Duty
Limited · 6.7L Power Stroke Diesel V8 (475 hp / 1,050 lb-ft)
Extended Cab 60,616 mi $31,161 Juneau
2018 Toyota Tundra
SR5 · 4.6L V8 (310 hp)
Regular Cab 112,354 mi $16,481 Juneau

The used pickup market in Alaska

Alaska sits in the West region of the United States, and that geography shapes what you will find on dealer lots here. Used pickup inventory here reflects local industry, climate, and commuting patterns. Mid-size and full-size half-tons make up the bulk of available listings, with heavy-duty trucks concentrated near agricultural and construction markets. The state has its own mix of climate effects — winter precipitation, road treatment, summer heat — that buyers should factor into any inspection.

If you are shopping Alaska specifically, our advice is to start with the brand breakdown above and click into the manufacturer that matches your needs. Cross-state shopping inside the same region is usually worth a half-day road trip; cross-region shopping rarely is unless you have found a specific configuration that is not available locally. Pay attention to the average mileage figure on this page — if a listing is dramatically below the state average for its model year, ask why, and if it is dramatically above, negotiate accordingly.

Body-style supply varies meaningfully by state. Crew cabs dominate suburban metros (because they are also family vehicles); regular cabs concentrate in agricultural and trades-heavy markets; extended cabs are rare almost everywhere because manufacturers have quietly dropped them from many model lines. If you are flexible on body style, a less-popular configuration in your state can save 10–25% over the equivalent crew cab.

Every listing detail page on TruckLot includes the dealer's general contact info, the truck's specs, an honest condition note, and the full price/mileage/year context. Use that data, request a vehicle history report, and never close on a used pickup without a third-party pre-purchase inspection — especially in Alaska, where climate-related wear varies by region and should be confirmed by inspection. The cost of a $150 inspection is the cheapest insurance you will ever buy on a five-figure purchase.