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Ford Mustang Mach-E vs Tesla Model Y

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Ford Mustang Mach-E comes out ahead overall (5.2 vs 4.4), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Ford Mustang Mach-ETesla Model Y
Reliability & Durability 6.0 4.0
User Sentiment 2.9 3.0
Complaint Severity 7.9 7.3
Consensus Strength 1.2 2.1
Value for Money 5.8 2.3
Owner Advocacy 3.3 3.9
Ford Mustang Mach-E

Ford built a genuinely quick electric crossover that happens to embarrass its own gas-powered Mustang in a drag race, the GT does 0-60 in 3.1 seconds, and one owner's 300,000-mile example lost just 8% battery capacity. The 2021, 2022 models suffered chronic infotainment failures (Bluetooth drops, system freezes) that Consumer Reports documented, and Ford's loss of the $7,500 federal tax credit leaves it thousands more expensive than a Model Y or Ioniq 5 after incentives. If you want the performance and can live without the rebate, the 2025 refresh at $38,000 finally adds the heat pump and fixes the value equation, just know you're buying into a brand still figuring out its EV commitment, with dealers sitting on unsold inventory.

Tesla Model Y

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.