Ford Explorer Depreciation Calculator
Calculate the Ford Explorer depreciation rate by year, mileage, and country — with accident-history adjustments and a year-by-year depreciation chart.
The Ford Explorer is one of America's best-selling three-row SUVs, but like most domestic family haulers it depreciates faster than Japanese rivals. Expect the Explorer to retain roughly 52% of its value after 5 years, with ST and Platinum trims losing value the fastest while base and hybrid models hold resale better.
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 $47,250
| Age | Value | % Retained | Annual depreciation |
|---|---|---|---|
| New | $47,250 | 100% | — |
| Year 1 | $36,855 | 78% | -$10,395 (22%) |
| Year 2 | $32,130 | 68% | -$4,725 (12.8%) |
| Year 3 | $28,823 | 61% | -$3,307 (10.3%) |
| Year 4 | $26,460 | 56% | -$2,363 (8.2%) |
| Year 5 | $24,570 | 52% | -$1,890 (7.1%) |
| Year 6 | $22,208 | 47% | -$2,362 (9.6%) |
| Year 7 | $19,845 | 42% | -$2,363 (10.6%) |
| Year 8 | $17,955 | 38% | -$1,890 (9.5%) |
| Year 9 | $16,065 | 34% | -$1,890 (10.5%) |
| Year 10 | $14,175 | 30% | -$1,890 (11.8%) |
Ford Explorer depreciation by country
The same car depreciates at different rates in different markets. Here's how the Ford Explorer depreciation rate changes across the seven major markets we track.
Baseline market and the Explorer's home turf. Strong fleet and police (Interceptor) presence can soften private-party prices, but consumer trims hold up reasonably well, especially 4WD and Timberline.
Similar depreciation pattern to the US, with 4WD models retaining value slightly better in snowy provinces. Rust concerns on older 5th-gen Explorers accelerate depreciation past year 7.
Never officially sold in right-hand drive; only a handful of PHEVs were imported. Thin used-market demand and high running costs push depreciation well above average.
Sold in very limited numbers as a PHEV only. High fuel and tax costs on large SUVs, plus limited dealer network, mean resale value suffers sharply after year 3.
The Explorer is a popular family SUV in the Gulf, where large V6 SUVs are in steady demand. Strong dealer support and preference for big, AC-friendly vehicles keep retention above the global average.
Not officially sold since Ford exited India in 2021. Existing gray-import and legacy units depreciate sharply due to absent parts and service support.
No longer sold new in Australia since 2016; buyers prefer the Everest. Remaining Explorers depreciate faster than body-on-frame rivals due to limited parts availability.
Ford Explorer 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 Explorer.
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.