HomeStatesArizona › Model year 2014

2014 used pickup trucks for sale in Arizona

1 active listings · average asking price $9,843 · average odometer 184,029 mi · Southwest region

12014 listings
$9,843State avg price
$9,680National 2014 avg
+1.7%vs national

2014 brands available in Arizona

2014 body styles in Arizona

Every 2014 pickup in Arizona

Make & ModelTrimBodyMileagePriceCity
Ram 2500
5.7L HEMI V8 Gas · 4WD
Tradesman Extended Cab 184,029 mi $9,843 Phoenix

What a 2014 pickup costs in Arizona

The 2014 model-year used pickup market in Arizona currently shows an average asking price of $9,843 across 1 listings, with average odometer readings around 184,029 mi. Compared with the national 2014 average of $9,680, prices in Arizona are running about 1.7% higher. Pricing in line with the national average means you are shopping a healthy, liquid market — neither distressed nor inflated — and should be able to negotiate normally.

Arizona sits in the Southwest region, and that geography matters when shopping a specific model year. Arizona is the unofficial preservation chamber of the used pickup world. Dry desert climate means frames stay clean for decades. The trade-off is sun-baked interiors, dried-out rubber seals, and faded paint. For a 2014 truck specifically, expect roughly 132,000 mi of expected lifetime mileage as the rough national baseline — anything significantly under that is either a low-use creampuff or a reset, and anything significantly over is a working truck that should be priced accordingly. Use the average odometer figure above as your local yardstick.

The 2014 model year falls into a specific equipment generation for most major nameplates. For Ford, 2014 F-150s sit in the aluminum-body 13th-generation run that introduced lightweighting and the second-generation 3.5L EcoBoost. Ram 1500s of the same vintage straddle the DS-generation classic body and the new DT generation depending on trim. Chevrolet and GMC half-tons are the K2XX or T1XX platform depending on year cutoff. Toyota Tundras are still on the second-generation aluminum-bed platform unless you are looking at a pre-redesign truck. Knowing which generation you are buying matters more than the model year itself — shop the model index for generation-by-generation buying notes.

Specific to Arizona: interior plastics, dashboards, and weather seals degrade fast under desert sun. For a 2014 truck — now 11 model years old — that inspection matters more than it would on a one- or two-year-old truck still under factory powertrain warranty. Frame, suspension bushings, brake lines, and any aluminum-to-steel galvanic-corrosion contact points should be inspected on a lift. Pay particular attention to coolant condition (a sign of how the previous owner maintained the truck), transmission fluid (especially on 8- and 10-speed automatics), and the condition of the rear-axle pinion seal. A pre-purchase inspection from an independent shop typically runs $120-$180 in most Southwest markets and will surface 80% of the issues that turn into expensive surprises later.

Cross-shopping adjacent model years is one of the highest-leverage moves a used-truck buyer can make. The 2015 market trades higher prices for lower mileage and more remaining factory warranty. If you are not locked into a specific model-year for tax or insurance reasons, run the math both ways before committing. Most buyers find that one model year on either side of their target is where the best total-cost-of-ownership math actually lives.

Once you have narrowed to two or three trucks worth driving across the state to inspect, treat the test-drive as the most important hour of the purchase. Cold-start the truck yourself before the dealer does. Listen for lifter tick on overhead-cam V8s. Drive at least 30 minutes including highway, low-speed turns from a stop, and at least one panic stop on dry pavement. A 2014 pickup with 184,029 mi on the clock has plenty of life left in it if it has been maintained — and almost no life left in it if it has not.

Other model years in Arizona