Slickdeals is community-supported.  We may get paid by brands for deals, including promoted items.
frontpageBenM2131 posted Dec 10, 2024 01:31 PM
frontpageBenM2131 posted Dec 10, 2024 01:31 PM

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

(Offer Will Vary By Region)

$29,995

$44,000

31% off
558 Comments 508,901 Views
Get Deal at Retailer
Good Deal
Save
Share
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

Community Voting

Deal Score
+217
Good Deal
Get Deal at Retailer

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Top Comments

evulflea
19 Posts
10 Reputation
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.
thiefraccoon
836 Posts
361 Reputation
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.
BCKit
416 Posts
166 Reputation
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.

557 Comments

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Dec 11, 2024 09:36 AM
2,769 Posts
Joined Jul 2007
BarryT82Dec 11, 2024 09:36 AM
2,769 Posts
I have a family member that works at the factory where these are built. I was told to stay away from the Escape because of the cheap build quality. The Lincoln version is higher quality. My wife has a PHEV and loves it. Our power company will discount the rate if we charge during off peak hours.
Dec 11, 2024 09:40 AM
204 Posts
Joined May 2017
FrancoisP59Dec 11, 2024 09:40 AM
204 Posts
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 ?
Charging from the engine is a waste of fuel. Typically you plug at home, not on the road like an EV, to get a few clean miles every day.
Dec 11, 2024 09:42 AM
204 Posts
Joined May 2017
FrancoisP59Dec 11, 2024 09:42 AM
204 Posts
Quote from nhatanh181 :
Dont forget to consider hybrid registration fee in some states
In Ohio it's $100
Dec 11, 2024 10:26 AM
1,903 Posts
Joined Apr 2007
topchoDec 11, 2024 10:26 AM
1,903 Posts
Quote from hariyer87 :
You do not need to charge it at a EV charging station. If you can plug it in a regular outlet in your home / garage / yard, that would top up the battery and save you some $ in the long run. Here's a scenario -
  1. If you plug it in daily at night for 10 hours, drive exactly 40 miles a day, you'd pay about $3 a day for electricity (assuming $0.20/kwh in your area, 15kwh * 0.2 = $3)
  2. If you never plug it in, use it as hybrid, you'd spend at least a gallon of fuel. If it costs $3 in your area, you lose nothing by NOT plugging it in.
  3. If you buy a regular non-hybrid car, the best you get is 30 mpg on a comparable SUV, thus you pay $4, thus missing out on $1.
In summary, driving it as hybrid or without plugging in still saves you almost as much as plugging it in, assuming $0.20/kwh electricity rates and $3/gallon of gas. If you have cheaper electricity and / or more expensive gas rates, you save some.
The main savings come when you compare with a non hyrbid 'regular' car.
Unless you pay $0.06-0.10 (or less) at night for example, in which case it costs one-third or half of the fuel cost.
Dec 11, 2024 10:32 AM
8,691 Posts
Joined Jun 2005
komondorDec 11, 2024 10:32 AM
8,691 Posts
We picked up a leftover 2023 after the buyback from our 2019 Fusion PHEV in Colorado they have a 5k tax credit so the deal was even sweeter. The dealer also gave us 4 yrs at 0% financing. The car has been fine for the 6 months we have had it. We get about 33 miles on a charge so about 95% of driving is all electric. We are down to a 1/2 tank for the 2nd time in 6 months. My only gripe is the Ford app is not as good as when they had a dedicated EV app. The new version of sync has great resolution but voice commands not as good as before. I had a 2013 CMAX and I could get to my car from a web page so I could start it from work when I had no cell service. ATT vs Verizon.
Dec 11, 2024 11:54 AM
127 Posts
Joined Feb 2016
mystrocsDec 11, 2024 11:54 AM
127 Posts
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 ?
More powerful, quicker car.
Plug in hybrids have a bigger battery than regular hybrids. Even without charging they have more umf for passing or catching up to highway speeds.
Dec 11, 2024 12:25 PM
555 Posts
Joined May 2007
drivenZDec 11, 2024 12:25 PM
555 Posts
Quote from kicker618 :
Thanks I'll stick to Toyota for hybrid.

Mazda if I want to avoid any cvt transmissions

And for anything EV I'll go with Tesla and get a model y.

Stick to the brands that focus on their specialties
lol at tesla supposedly being a car with high build quality
2

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Dec 11, 2024 12:27 PM
133 Posts
Joined May 2010
mkseahawkDec 11, 2024 12:27 PM
133 Posts
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 would still get some benefit. I can't tell by your post if you're going to do this, but installing a charging outlet at your house would almost certainly pay for itself.
Dec 11, 2024 12:34 PM
4 Posts
Joined Jan 2023
ScarletTest1709Dec 11, 2024 12:34 PM
4 Posts
Quote from VarmintCong :
Fine print says this regarding the credit.

In addition, their modified adjusted gross income (AGI) may not exceed: $300,000 for married couples filing jointly $225,000 for heads of households $150,000 for all other filers
Would this be for 2024 AGI or 2023?
Dec 11, 2024 12:47 PM
8,005 Posts
Joined Oct 2004
VarmintCongDec 11, 2024 12:47 PM
8,005 Posts
Quote from ScarletTest1709 :
Would this be for 2024 AGI or 2023?
They wouldn't be able to see your 2024 AGI.
Dec 11, 2024 12:50 PM
108 Posts
Joined Aug 2018
JustinB7539Dec 11, 2024 12:50 PM
108 Posts
I don't know what the lease programs look like on these, but that's generally the route I want to go on this type of vehicle. Stays in warranty, limited depreciation, and you're not stuck with old tech.
Dec 11, 2024 12:56 PM
1,062 Posts
Joined Jul 2011
shoulda2Dec 11, 2024 12:56 PM
1,062 Posts
Quote from MakeMoreDeals :
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.
Less than that in winter if you are in a colder area our honda clarity is a 2018 and it still shows 40-45 in the summer but in winter it's close to 23-26
Dec 11, 2024 01:00 PM
303 Posts
Joined Oct 2022
WittyBelieve1554Dec 11, 2024 01:00 PM
303 Posts
The price would look better if you took 2 zeros off it
5
Dec 11, 2024 01:10 PM
241 Posts
Joined Sep 2013
chaz0789Dec 11, 2024 01:10 PM
241 Posts
Did slightly better than you, bought one earlier this month. Selling price was 24,647 before TTL. However I had an additional 1250 offer from Ford.

Sign up for a Slickdeals account to remove this ad.

Dec 11, 2024 01:13 PM
688 Posts
Joined Dec 2017
DaveC4644Dec 11, 2024 01:13 PM
688 Posts
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.
That depends on your speed. I live off of a 55mph country road and the engine will kick in right away to get you up and going. At least that is the data I've found on most PHEVs.

Leave a Comment

Unregistered (You)

Related Searches

Popular Deals

Trending Deals