Ford Bronco Depreciation Calculator
Calculate the Ford Bronco depreciation rate by year, mileage, and country — with accident-history adjustments and a year-by-year depreciation chart.
The reborn Ford Bronco is a body-on-frame off-road SUV that competes directly with the Jeep Wrangler. Strong enthusiast demand, removable roof/doors, and limited early-production supply have given the Bronco exceptional resale value — among the best retained value of any non-luxury SUV on the market.
Depreciation inputs
Current generation — no successor has launched yet.
Depreciation curve · your ownership window
Year-by-year depreciation
Depreciation rate per year, based on an MSRP of $64,993
| Age | Value | % Retained | Annual depreciation |
|---|---|---|---|
| New | $64,993 | 100% | — |
| Year 1 | $59,794 | 92% | -$5,199 (8%) |
| Year 2 | $55,244 | 85% | -$4,550 (7.6%) |
| Year 3 | $50,695 | 78% | -$4,549 (8.2%) |
| Year 4 | $46,795 | 72% | -$3,900 (7.7%) |
| Year 5 | $42,895 | 66% | -$3,900 (8.3%) |
| Year 6 | $38,996 | 60% | -$3,899 (9.1%) |
| Year 7 | $35,746 | 55% | -$3,250 (8.3%) |
| Year 8 | $32,497 | 50% | -$3,249 (9.1%) |
| Year 9 | $29,897 | 46% | -$2,600 (8%) |
| Year 10 | $27,297 | 42% | -$2,600 (8.7%) |
Ford Bronco depreciation by country
The same car depreciates at different rates in different markets. Here's how the Ford Bronco depreciation rate changes across the seven major markets we track.
Baseline and primary market. Bronco demand has been exceptional since the 2021 relaunch, with many early units selling above MSRP and 3-year retention among the strongest in the segment.
Strong demand in Canada mirrors the US, especially in Alberta and BC where off-road capability is prized. Winter-equipped Badlands and Sasquatch trims hold value particularly well.
Not officially sold in the UK — only grey imports exist. Depreciation is steeper due to narrow parts/service support and right-hand-drive limitations.
Limited presence via specialist importers; width, emissions, and fuel costs hurt demand. Resale values are softer outside of enthusiast circles.
Officially sold in the Gulf and popular for desert/dune use. The V6 Badlands and Wildtrak variants retain value well given off-road culture and strong fleet appeal.
Not officially sold in India following Ford's market exit. Extremely limited grey-market presence means steep depreciation and poor parts access.
Not factory-sold in Australia; available only through remanufactured RHD conversions at high premiums. Conversion cost is largely non-recoverable at resale, accelerating depreciation.
Ford Bronco depreciation after an accident
An accident on a vehicle's history permanently increases its depreciation rate, even after perfect repairs. Here's how much extra depreciation each severity level adds to a Ford Bronco.
Paintwork, bumper scuffs, non-structural repairs. Disclosed on history reports but limited resale impact.
Panel replacement, airbag deployment, meaningful CARFAX entry. Significantly accelerates depreciation.
Frame damage, flood, salvage title. Permanent depreciation hit even after full restoration.
This "diminished value" is the extra depreciation a car carries after an accident. Insurance rarely reimburses it — our calculator bakes it into every depreciation estimate.