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Ford F-150 Lightning vs Ford Maverick

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Ford F-150 Lightning (7.5) and Ford Maverick (7.7) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 F-150 LightningMaverick
Reliability & Durability 8.2 6.9
User Sentiment 8.2 7.6
Complaint Severity 7.3 7.7
Consensus Strength 4.4 6.1
Value for Money 5.5 5.7
Owner Advocacy 6.2 8.6
Ford F-150 Lightning

The Lightning is the F-150 that drives like a sports sedan, instant torque, the quietest cabin in any truck, and a ride that somehow gets better when you load it up. The deal-breaker is concrete: towing cuts range by two-thirds, turning a 300-mile trip into a charging scavenger hunt, and the software still boots slower than your laptop while burying every climate control three taps deep. If you charge at home, rarely tow far, and want the smoothest daily driver in the segment, it's a steal at current lease rates; if you need a real workhorse for long hauls, the gas F-150 still does that job better.

Ford Maverick

The Maverick is the truck that finally admits most people need a bed, not a monument, and the hybrid's 37-42 MPG makes it the only pickup that doesn't punish you at the pump. The catch is Ford's pricing ambition: what launched at $20k now costs $40k loaded, asking midsize money for budget plastics, a back seat that hates adults, and early 2022 models that needed multiple dealer trips for battery drain and electrical gremlins. If you haul lumber and garden supplies without towing heavy or seating four comfortably, and you avoid that first model year, this is the right-sized truck; if rear-seat space or serious capability matter, you need something bigger.