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Ford Maverick vs GMC Sierra 1500

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
It's close — Ford Maverick (7.7) and GMC Sierra 1500 (7.9) score nearly the same. Pick on the trade-offs that matter to you.
Dimension by dimension
 Ford MaverickGMC Sierra 1500
Reliability & Durability 6.9 8.2
User Sentiment 7.6 8.3
Complaint Severity 7.7 7.1
Consensus Strength 6.1 4.8
Value for Money 5.7 4.6
Owner Advocacy 8.6 9.0
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.

GMC Sierra 1500

GM's upscale twin to the Silverado wins on looks, even Ford loyalists admit it's the best-looking truck you can buy, but the engine choice matters more than the badge. The 5.3L V8 is the workhorse: proven across 200k-mile police fleets, boring in the best way. The 3.0L diesel hits 28 mpg when it works, but some batches grenaded early, and the 6.2L left 2020-2022 owners stranded with catastrophic failures. The infotainment skips and mutes itself on 2022+ trucks, a known bug GM has ignored for years. Pricing has crept into luxury territory, lawyers and soccer moms, not the working crowd. Buy a pre-2020 model for proven reliability, or spec a new one with the 5.3L and a strong warranty. Skip the 6.2L on anything 2020-2022, and roll the dice on the diesel only if fuel economy justifies the risk. It'll tow your world and turn heads, as long as you pick the right engine and forgive the screen's morning mood.