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frontpage Posted by BenM2131 • Dec 10, 2024
frontpage Posted by BenM2131 • Dec 10, 2024

Select Ford Dealerships: 2024 Ford Escape Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicle

(Offer Will Vary By Region)

$29,995

$44,000

31% off
558 Comments 503,291 Views
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Deal Details
Select Ford Dealerships are offering 2024 Ford Escape Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicle for ~$29,995 (price will vary by dealership) after Ford Incentives, Dealership Discount and $3,750 Federal EV Tax Credit for qualified buyers. This offer is limited to select locations/dealerships only.

Thanks to Community Members BenM2131 for posting this deal.
  • Note: Links below may redirect to your region; if you want .
Example locations (to see other regional prices, enter your zip code on the landing page):

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • Offer expires 1/2/2025, while supplies last.
  • Price excludes tax, title, license, registration fees, and dealer options and charges.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by BenM2131
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Select Ford Dealerships are offering 2024 Ford Escape Plug-In Hybrid Electric Vehicle for ~$29,995 (price will vary by dealership) after Ford Incentives, Dealership Discount and $3,750 Federal EV Tax Credit for qualified buyers. This offer is limited to select locations/dealerships only.

Thanks to Community Members BenM2131 for posting this deal.
  • Note: Links below may redirect to your region; if you want .
Example locations (to see other regional prices, enter your zip code on the landing page):

Editor's Notes

Written by RevOne | Staff
  • Offer expires 1/2/2025, while supplies last.
  • Price excludes tax, title, license, registration fees, and dealer options and charges.
  • Get 1%-5% cash back on deals like this with a cash back credit card. Compare the available cash back credit cards here.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by BenM2131

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Top Comments

Yes, you don't have to plug this in at all if you don't want. You can drive it as a 100% gas car. I have a PHEV Jeep (28 miles electric) and it's just enough to run the kids to school, grab lunch, pick them up again, run to Costco, and get home all on electric. If I run out of battery, the gas engine kicks on and I have another 250 miles of range. When we do road trips, you basically run out of electric within 15 minutes and then it's just a gas vehicle the rest of the way. PHEV vehicles are not ones that you'd charge at a public charger (you could, it would be dumb). Electric at home, gas anywhere else.
Oh, and you can also run this hybrid (battery + engine on) and then you have a very efficient gas vehicle with the added power of electric. When it's cold (under 15 f) the car will not run in electric only - just hybrid.
A plug-in hybrid CAN act as a full EV for limited range (15~50miles, typically).

But you could also never plug it in, and use it as a typical hybrid vehicle, where the regenerative braking (the otherwise wasted energy is used to recharge the battery) yields improved MPG.

...But if you really think you will never get any use out of it being a Plug-in hybridk, typical non-PH hybrids are always cheaper.
I drive a Chevrolet Volt PHEV. It has 50 miles of electric range (13KWH battery). It really is a sweet spot as a second car for mostly in town driving, or a full-electric alternative for a single car household.

I plug it in to 110 (12A) outlet overnight and get a full charge in about 10 hours. Most days that I drive it I only use the electric power. On days I drive more or if I forget to plug it in, I just use the gas in the tank. It has a 9 Gallon fuel tank which gives about 325 miles of driving on gas.

When I go on road trips I put it in gas mode while I'm on the highway and save the battery for when I'm doing city driving or hit stop and go traffic. On long trips (600M) the volt averages about 40mpg of mostly gas driving.

Outside of long road trips I buy gas once every 3-4 months. My electric bill is high, but it's still only about $100/month in electricity for 30-50 miles of driving each day (California, 15c/KWh). I don't have severe winters where I live, so the cold is only a factor when I go to the ski hill.

If you truly intend to never charge the PHEV, then get a non-plug in hybrid instead. PHEV cars have a larger battery which means driving around more weight burns more fuel. If you're never charging that battery to full, then there's no use in hauling it around.

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Dec 10, 2024
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likeaw
Dec 10, 2024
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Wish these had a bigger battery, like for 50-60 miles. I have a 2019 Fusion Energi that Ford is going to buy back because they had a defective battery recall and don't want to make new parts. The buyback seems to be fair.
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Red2play
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Quote from likeaw :
Wish these had a bigger battery, like for 50-60 miles. I have a 2019 Fusion Energi that Ford is going to buy back because they had a defective battery recall and don't want to make new parts. The buyback seems to be fair.
Its a PHEV hybrid. The first 37 miles are electric and the rest gas. If you do local commutes, then this is a viable option.
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ListedGuru
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Any financing deals from Ford Credit on these as well? I'll have to research more but I believe these are only FWD?
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Dec 10, 2024
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darkhunter00
Dec 10, 2024
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Sorry if dumb question but if someone was more rural with limited charging options, could you buy and just drive this as a normal gas car? Would you still get some benefit from the battery if you never plugged it in?

I am just confused on what I read when I googled. It says the battery can charge from braking and the engine so it will just "naturally" charge while doing normal driving ?

Is this still a good deal if used this way ?
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thiefraccoon
Dec 10, 2024
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Quote from darkhunter00 :
Sorry if dumb question but if someone was more rural with limited charging options, could you buy and just drive this as a normal gas car? Would you still get some benefit from the battery if you never plugged it in?

I am just confused on what I read when I googled. It says the battery can charge from braking and the engine so it will just "naturally" charge while doing normal driving ?

Is this still a good deal if used this way ?
A plug-in hybrid CAN act as a full EV for limited range (15~50miles, typically).

But you could also never plug it in, and use it as a typical hybrid vehicle, where the regenerative braking (the otherwise wasted energy is used to recharge the battery) yields improved MPG.

...But if you really think you will never get any use out of it being a Plug-in hybridk, typical non-PH hybrids are always cheaper.
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Dec 10, 2024
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Dec 10, 2024
darkhunter00
Dec 10, 2024
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Quote from ListedGuru :
Any financing deals from Ford Credit on these as well? I'll have to research more but I believe these are only FWD?
sorry I think that site was wrong. Edited.
Last edited by darkhunter00 December 10, 2024 at 06:31 AM.
Dec 10, 2024
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evulflea
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Quote from darkhunter00 :
Sorry if dumb question but if someone was more rural with limited charging options, could you buy and just drive this as a normal gas car? Would you still get some benefit from the battery if you never plugged it in?I am just confused on what I read when I googled. It says the battery can charge from braking and the engine so it will just "naturally" charge while doing normal driving ?Is this still a good deal if used this way ?
Yes, you don't have to plug this in at all if you don't want. You can drive it as a 100% gas car. I have a PHEV Jeep (28 miles electric) and it's just enough to run the kids to school, grab lunch, pick them up again, run to Costco, and get home all on electric. If I run out of battery, the gas engine kicks on and I have another 250 miles of range. When we do road trips, you basically run out of electric within 15 minutes and then it's just a gas vehicle the rest of the way. PHEV vehicles are not ones that you'd charge at a public charger (you could, it would be dumb). Electric at home, gas anywhere else.
Oh, and you can also run this hybrid (battery + engine on) and then you have a very efficient gas vehicle with the added power of electric. When it's cold (under 15 f) the car will not run in electric only - just hybrid.
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Dec 10, 2024
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darkhunter00
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Quote from thiefraccoon :
A plug-in hybrid CAN act as a full EV for limited range (15~50miles, typically).

But you could also never plug it in, and use it as a typical hybrid vehicle, where the regenerative braking (the otherwise wasted energy is used to recharge the battery) yields improved MPG.

...But if you really think you will never get any use out of it being a Plug-in hybridk, typical non-PH hybrids are always cheaper.
Thanks! Well I get that, that if I never charged it, sort of defeats the purpose, might as well buy a normal car. It just seemed like in this one instance with all the credits, that dealer is showing a price of just 27K then I guess 29K out the door as OP said after taxes and such.

I checked and the lowest MSRP on a normal gas only Escape is $29,495
Now maybe there are incentives that bring that down but it just seems like the hybrid is far cheaper than the regular one with the tax credit.

So if someone wanted an escape, why buy the regular if the hybrid is the same even if you never charge it ? Or maybe I am missing something.
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Dec 10, 2024
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Dec 10, 2024
thiefraccoon
Dec 10, 2024
822 Posts
Quote from darkhunter00 :
Thanks! Well I get that, that if I never charged it, sort of defeats the purpose, might as well buy a normal car. It just seemed like in this one instance with all the credits, that dealer is showing a price of just 27K then I guess 29K out the door as OP said after taxes and such.

I checked and the lowest MSRP on a normal gas only Escape is $29,495
Now maybe there are incentives that bring that down but it just seems like the hybrid is far cheaper than the regular one with the tax credit.

So if someone wanted an escape, why buy the regular if the hybrid is the same even if you never charge it ? Or maybe I am missing something.
Sorry I always have to explain to people the diff between normal hybrids and plug-ins.
Then ya ofc who wouldn't get the plug-in, you'd be able to sell it for more down the line🤑
Dec 10, 2024
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likeaw
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Quote from Red2play :
Its a PHEV hybrid. The first 37 miles are electric and the rest gas. If you do local commutes, then this is a viable option.
Once you get on the freeway doing 70-80+ mph here in DFW, your 37 so called miles is more like 25 or less. The Fusion Energi has the same drive train. So, if you have more then a 12 mile commute on freeway and can't charge at work, then you will be using gas. Same on a Tesla, the faster you go the less range you have. But more fun getting to that speed....lol
Last edited by likeaw December 10, 2024 at 06:35 AM.
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Dec 10, 2024
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lleung1980
Dec 10, 2024
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Quote from likeaw :
Wish these had a bigger battery, like for 50-60 miles. I have a 2019 Fusion Energi that Ford is going to buy back because they had a defective battery recall and don't want to make new parts. The buyback seems to be fair.
Can you share more info about the recall? My wife has the same car
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Quote from lleung1980 :
Can you share more info about the recall? My wife has the same car
Here [ford.com]

Hope this helps.
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MakeMoreDeals
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37 miles EV range on paper brand new means 30 miles EV range in real life. In a few years, it will be 30 miles EV range on paper.
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Dec 10, 2024
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boxturtle
Dec 10, 2024
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Quote from darkhunter00 :
Thanks! Well I get that, that if I never charged it, sort of defeats the purpose, might as well buy a normal car. It just seemed like in this one instance with all the credits, that dealer is showing a price of just 27K then I guess 29K out the door as OP said after taxes and such.

I checked and the lowest MSRP on a normal gas only Escape is $29,495
Now maybe there are incentives that bring that down but it just seems like the hybrid is far cheaper than the regular one with the tax credit.

So if someone wanted an escape, why buy the regular if the hybrid is the same even if you never charge it ? Or maybe I am missing something.
Why wouldn't you want to charge it? Cost per mile driven is cheaper when using electric versus gas. You don't need a special charger, just use the cord that comes with the vehicle.
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