The Ford Escape's reliability varies dramatically by generation. The 2008-2012 models, especially V6 and hybrid variants, are praised for durability with many exceeding 250k miles. The 2013-2019 generation suffers from systematic transmission failures and catastrophic 1.5L/1.6L ecoboost engine issues including coolant intrusion requiring full engine replacement. The current 2020-2026 generation shows improvement with better powertrains (especially hybrids achieving 35-40 MPG), but experts note cheap interior materials, unsupportive seats, and infotainment bugs. Community consensus: avoid 2013-2019 models, consider 2nd gen or current hybrid if budget allows.
Quick acceleration, strong range, and the Supercharger network still make this a capable electric crossover, and the 2026 Juniper refresh genuinely fixes the harsh ride and cabin noise that plagued earlier versions. But the ownership experience is the catch: 2023 models leaked water through the trunk seals badly enough for Consumer Reports to flag it, delivery quality is a coin toss (paint damage, misaligned panels, even a reported roof detachment), and service is email-only with centers that can go quiet for weeks. If you can tolerate the support gamble, the fundamentals work, but the Ioniq 5, EV6, and Mach-E deliver similar capability with a company that answers the phone.