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Dodge Challenger vs Ford Mustang

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Dodge Challenger comes out ahead overall (7.1 vs 6.6), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Dodge ChallengerFord Mustang
Reliability & Durability 6.0 7.3
User Sentiment 8.1 6.7
Complaint Severity 7.3 7.3
Consensus Strength 3.8 4.3
Value for Money 3.5 0.9
Owner Advocacy 8.9 8.2
Dodge Challenger

A 4,000-pound couch that'll smoke its tires, seat four adults comfortably, and return 12 mpg if you're having any fun at all. The V8 models deliver genuinely quick acceleration (the supercharged Hellcats are genuinely unhinged), but handling feels like piloting a cruise ship through corners. The real split: if you want a drag strip hero or a comfortable highway bruiser with a killer exhaust note, it's hard to beat. If you want to carve canyons or care about fuel costs, buy literally anything else. The 2023 discontinuation sparked dealer markups that make even Scat Packs cost Hellcat money, so shop carefully or wait for sanity to return.

Ford Mustang

Ford's latest GT delivers everything you'd want from a V8 sports car, a 5.0L Coyote that howls, handling sharp enough to embarrass the Camaro, and a cabin you can actually live with daily. The problem is the sticker shock: a base GT that cost $33k in 2021 now starts at $50k, and the Dark Horse pushes $70k-$80k, which is GT350 territory from just a few years ago. The car itself hasn't gotten worse, it's objectively better, but Ford has priced it out of reach for the young enthusiasts and budget-conscious buyers who made the Mustang a cultural icon. If you can afford it or find a deal, you're getting a legitimately great sports car. If you're shopping on the budget this nameplate used to own, you'll be cross-shopping used Corvettes and wondering what happened to affordable V8 thrills.