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Ford Explorer vs Nissan Rogue

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Ford Explorer (4.7) and Nissan Rogue (4.8) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Ford ExplorerNissan Rogue
Reliability & Durability 4.0 6.7
User Sentiment 3.0 1.1
Complaint Severity 6.8 6.4
Consensus Strength 1.6 1.5
Value for Money 2.7 2.3
Owner Advocacy 6.4 6.7
Ford Explorer

Ford's three-row workhorse splits into two distinct eras, and knowing which you're buying matters more than the badge. The 2013-2019 generation hides a ticking time bomb: the water pump lives behind the timing cover, turning what should be a $400 maintenance item into a $5,000 engine-out ordeal that replaces timing chains whether they're worn or not. The 2020 redesign fixed that engineering blunder but stumbled out of the gate, 2021 models left the factory missing sunroof drain tubes, flooding cabins and triggering $26k repair bills, while infotainment screens freeze mid-drive across the lineup. Police fleets rack up 300k miles through daily beatings, proving the bones can take punishment, but the third row stays cramped and cost-cut bushings needed a recall. If you need the space and can stomach Ford's quality control lottery, buy 2022 or newer. Otherwise, the Highlander costs the same and won't make you wonder what breaks next.

Nissan Rogue

Nissan's plastic oil pan cracks during the first oil change so often that dealers now stock replacements and some independent shops refuse to service new Rogues entirely. The 3-cylinder VC-Turbo engine (2022-2024 models) grenades head gaskets before 50,000 miles, requiring full long-block replacements under warranty. Add a recall that requires pulling the entire dashboard to fix an airbag, and you've got a vehicle that spends more time in service bays than most buyers bargained for. The 2021+ redesign brought genuinely nice interiors and strong fuel economy, and some owners rack up 200k+ miles without drama, but those successes feel like lottery wins when mechanics report near-universal oil pan failures and catastrophic engine problems on low-mileage examples. If you're leasing or buying new with plans to trade before warranty expires, the problems stay Nissan's. If you're buying used or keeping it long-term, you're inheriting known failure points with expensive fixes. The CR-V and RAV4 cost more upfront but don't gamble with your oil pan.