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Jeep Gladiator vs Ram 1500

Honest head-to-head from real owner consensus
Jeep Gladiator comes out ahead overall (4.5 vs 3.4), but the breakdown below shows where each one wins.
Dimension by dimension
 Jeep GladiatorRam 1500
Reliability & Durability 3.3 2.7
User Sentiment 3.0 2.4
Complaint Severity 7.1 6.5
Consensus Strength 2.4 1.3
Value for Money 1.3 2.0
Owner Advocacy 6.1 3.2
Jeep Gladiator

The Gladiator occupies a unique but narrow niche: it's essentially a Wrangler with a bed, not a traditional pickup. For buyers who specifically want off-road capability with open-air driving and occasional truck utility, it delivers an experience no competitor matches. However, systematic quality issues plague current models, clutch failures at 6k-18k miles, engine failures (including catastrophic cylinder failures while driving), and electrical gremlins are documented across multiple independent reports. It rides rough, costs significantly more than better-equipped competitors, and the 5' bed limits real truck work. Enthusiasts accept the trade-offs; those expecting daily-driver comfort or truck capability universally express regret. Value proposition is poor unless you specifically need this exact combination of features.

Ram 1500

If you're shopping used Rams from 2019-2024, listen for the Hemi tick, that cold-start ticking noise signals lifter failure brewing, a repair that costs thousands and craters resale the moment it starts. Owners report oil pans corroding through at 55k miles, transmissions shuddering, and catastrophic engine failures on brand-new 2024s that didn't survive to their first oil change. One buyer found the parking brake held together with Vise-Grips. The 2025 redesign ditches the Hemi entirely for a Hurricane inline-six, and early expert reviews praise the smooth ride, strong power, and luxury-grade cabin in top trims. But it's too new to prove Stellantis fixed the underlying quality control issues or just swapped problems. Used Hemi-era trucks are a gamble unless you verify low idle hours and no tick. New buyers are beta-testing a clean-sheet powertrain from a company whose recent track record offers little reassurance. If you need a full-size truck now, the F-150 and Silverado have more predictable long-term costs.