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Ford Edge vs Ford Mustang Mach-E

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Ford Edge (5.2) and Ford Mustang Mach-E (5.2) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 EdgeMustang Mach-E
Reliability & Durability 6.0 6.0
User Sentiment 2.6 2.9
Complaint Severity 5.9 7.9
Consensus Strength 3.0 1.2
Value for Money 3.8 5.8
Owner Advocacy 6.2 3.3
Ford Edge

Spacious and comfortable when it's running right, but the Edge's reliability story splits sharply by generation. The 2007-2015 models with the 3.5L V6 hide an internal water pump that can fail without warning and dump coolant into your oil, killing the engine before you notice, a $2,000 to $5,000 repair that's not if but when. Many owners have pushed these past 200k miles, but only after replacing that pump or getting lucky. The 2020-2024 models dodged that specific nightmare but brought a new one: the 8F35 transmission is already shuddering and slipping at low mileage, and there's no long-term data to say whether it'll hold up. Ford discontinued the Edge entirely after 2024, so parts availability is a future question mark. If you find an older one with the water pump already replaced and documented maintenance, it's a solid midsize hauler. Otherwise, you're gambling on expensive failures with thin odds.

Ford Mustang Mach-E

Ford built a genuinely quick electric crossover that happens to embarrass its own gas-powered Mustang in a drag race, the GT does 0-60 in 3.1 seconds, and one owner's 300,000-mile example lost just 8% battery capacity. The 2021, 2022 models suffered chronic infotainment failures (Bluetooth drops, system freezes) that Consumer Reports documented, and Ford's loss of the $7,500 federal tax credit leaves it thousands more expensive than a Model Y or Ioniq 5 after incentives. If you want the performance and can live without the rebate, the 2025 refresh at $38,000 finally adds the heat pump and fixes the value equation, just know you're buying into a brand still figuring out its EV commitment, with dealers sitting on unsold inventory.