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I stumbled across this video while looking at Maverick reviews, and I think some of it is really good, and some of it doesn't quite land for Mavericks.
First off, watching the video does have me questioning things like maintenance costs with an engine + hybrid system, and longevity + replacement costs of the battery.
But I think the author missed a big one on the price points. Let me explain:
For simplicity I'm going to discuss the 2025 AWD + 4K towing configurations, because that's what I want to actually buy. The hybrid Maverick is more expensive than the ecoboost. And it will pay for it's $2,200 101A equipment group in roughly 5 years based on the fuel savings on the window sticker. But the video fails to mention that the 5 year savings is against a mythical average truck, not the ecoboost. And the ecoboost looses about 200 dollars a year vs that mythical truck economy. So we're going to find out how long you need to own the truck for just the fuel savings to make the hybrid break even.
Starting with an Ecoboost with the AWD + 4K towing:
PDF link
This truck has a MSRP of $30,550 and a "slope" of +$200 per year in additional fuel costs vs the average.
Next up the hybrid:
PDF link
This truck has a MSRP of $32,350 and a "slope" of -$500 per year in saved fuel costs vs the average.
Plotting them gives:
So your actual break even point for buying a hybrid (maintenance and all else being equal) is just under 3 years. I think that counts as "not bad."
First off, watching the video does have me questioning things like maintenance costs with an engine + hybrid system, and longevity + replacement costs of the battery.
But I think the author missed a big one on the price points. Let me explain:
For simplicity I'm going to discuss the 2025 AWD + 4K towing configurations, because that's what I want to actually buy. The hybrid Maverick is more expensive than the ecoboost. And it will pay for it's $2,200 101A equipment group in roughly 5 years based on the fuel savings on the window sticker. But the video fails to mention that the 5 year savings is against a mythical average truck, not the ecoboost. And the ecoboost looses about 200 dollars a year vs that mythical truck economy. So we're going to find out how long you need to own the truck for just the fuel savings to make the hybrid break even.
Starting with an Ecoboost with the AWD + 4K towing:
PDF link
This truck has a MSRP of $30,550 and a "slope" of +$200 per year in additional fuel costs vs the average.
Next up the hybrid:
PDF link
This truck has a MSRP of $32,350 and a "slope" of -$500 per year in saved fuel costs vs the average.
Plotting them gives:
So your actual break even point for buying a hybrid (maintenance and all else being equal) is just under 3 years. I think that counts as "not bad."
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