Ford’s F-150, Mustang, And Super Duty Just Won Best-In-Segment For The Second Year Running In JD Power’s 2026 Study

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Friday, 26 Jun 2026 10:30 0 3 autotech

Ford just pulled off something it hasn’t done in 16 years: topping JD Power’s U.S. Initial Quality Study as America’s highest-quality mass-market brand. The 2026 results, released this week, put Ford at 152 problems per 100 vehicles—ahead of Nissan at 156 and Buick at 162—and the headline number only tells part of the story.

The F-150, Mustang, and Super Duty each claimed best-in-segment for the second consecutive year, and seven of Ford’s ten evaluated models finished in the top three of their respective categories. For anyone who stuck with the Blue Oval through its recall-heavy stretch, this one lands differently. It’s not a fluke — it’s a structural reset.

Seven Of Ten Models In The Top Three—What The Numbers Actually Mean

2026 Ford F-150 Hybrid rear 3/4 shot
TopSpeed | Michael Frank

JD Power’s Initial Quality Study measures the number of problems owners report during the first 90 days of ownership, expressed as problems per 100 vehicles. Lower is better. Ford’s 152 PP100 puts clear daylight between it and the rest of the mass-market field, with Nissan and Buick as the nearest challengers.

The three segment wins—F-150, Mustang, and Super Duty—are the ones that matter most to Ford’s identity. These aren’t niche halo models padding a scorecard; they’re the core of what Ford sells and what its buyers care about. Winning all three for back-to-back years signals consistency, not a one-year anomaly. The seven-of-ten stat reinforces that the quality gains are broad rather than concentrated in a single lucky model line.

How Ford Actually Fixed Its Quality Problems

Exotics and sports cars at 2026 Detroit auto show.
Tom Murphy | TopSpeed

The turnaround didn’t happen by accident, and Ford’s executives aren’t pretending it did. The company restructured its quality assurance operation around 2023, building what it calls a unified industrial system team that leans heavily on veteran engineers doing hands-on work rather than delegating everything to automated systems. The reasoning: AI-driven diagnostics are only as reliable as the data they’re trained on, and Ford decided human expertise needed to be back in the loop.

The practical changes are specific and worth knowing. Engine tear-downs, which previously happened every few months, now occur daily. Lab vehicles are run at wide-open throttle in extreme heat conditions, pushing simulated mileage to around 225,000 miles—roughly 15 years of real-world driving—to surface failures before they reach production. On the software side, Ford stress-tested its vehicle systems with hundreds of thousands of automated scenarios to catch digital bugs early. Modern trucks and performance cars are as much software platforms as mechanical ones, and Ford treated that side of the equation with the same rigor a major tech firm would apply to a product launch.

The Recall Caveat—And Why This Result Still Matters

2026 Ford F-150 Raptor R Mid Jump
Ford

Ford recalled nearly 20 million vehicles between April 2025 and April 2026, and that context isn’t going away quietly. Company executives have acknowledged that recent warranty activity is a lagging indicator—it reflects older vehicle generations, not the production line running today.

That distinction is exactly why the 2026 IQS result carries weight. The study measures new vehicles, built under the revised protocols, experienced by owners in their first 90 days. It doesn’t look backward at recall histories; it looks at what’s rolling off the line right now. For buyers shopping a new F-150, Mustang, or Super Duty, that’s the relevant signal. The recall noise from 2025 is real, but it belongs to a different manufacturing era than the trucks and muscle cars Ford is building today.

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What This Means For Ford Buyers And Loyalists

2026 Ford F-150 Raptor R dash
Ford

For anyone who questioned Ford’s reliability over the past couple of years, this study offers a concrete answer rather than a PR promise. The F-150 remains the best-selling truck in America, and it’s now also the segment’s quality benchmark by an independent measure. The Mustang—already carrying the weight of Ford’s performance identity—backs that up with its own segment win. The Super Duty, which competes in a segment where buyers depend on their trucks for actual work, rounds out a sweep that covers Ford’s most important nameplates.

Porter overall brand quality ranking aside, this is the first time since 2010 that Ford has sat at the top of the mass-market table. That’s a long gap, and closing it required more than incremental improvement. Whether the gains hold through the next model cycles will be the real test—but right now, the data points in one direction.

Sources: Ford From the Road, Reuters

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