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.
Mercedes built its bestselling SUV on a solid foundation, the 2016-2022 GLC earned genuine loyalty with 100k-mile trouble-free runs and that swanky interior. But the 2025 GLC 350e plug-in hybrid is stranding owners with complete electrical shutdowns while driving, triggering lemon law buybacks in California. Mercedes calls it a software glitch; owners wait weeks for parts from Germany while their $60k SUV sits dead. The standard gas models look promising with refined engines and improved cabins, but thin long-term data means you're betting on Mercedes fixing what broke between generations. Budget for warranty coverage, repair bills hit $5k-6k when things fail, and modern Mercedes complexity makes that a when, not if.