2024 Ford Bronco Heritage Edition First Test Review: Old-School Cool
Adding a splash of retro style on top of the Bronco’s throwback design turns Ford’s off-road SUV into an instant classic.Pros
- Makes an already great design even better
- Soft, squishy fun
- Two-door actually fits a family of four
Cons
- V-8 thirst, four-cylinder performance
- Basic build quality misses
- No such thing as a cheap Bronco
The idea of a Ford Bronco Heritage Edition seems absurd on its face. All modern Ford Broncos are throwbacks to the 1966 original. Could a retro-themed special edition be anything other than a lame marketing ploy to separate buyers from more of their money?
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The answer, as your eyes have probably already relayed to your brain, is yes. The Bronco Heritage isn’t your typical stickers-and-badges special edition. It’s an awesome design exercise. Splashes of white paint, steel front and rear bumpers, and steel-look wheels elevate the Bronco’s good looks to high fashion. The aesthetic works magic on candy-colored Broncos, but even basic black becomes special with the Heritage treatment. Go ahead, Ford, have more of our money.
What You Pay vs. What You Get
Although there’s no such thing as a value-priced Bronco in 2024, you can justify the Heritage Edition as a good deal relative to the rest of the lineup. Build a base Big Bend trim with similar equipment and capabilities as the $53,740 two-door model photographed and tested for this story, and you’ll spend roughly $1,400 more without replicating the vintage style.
Heritage models come with two or four doors, manual or automatic transmissions, and four or six cylinders, but they’re always well equipped with heated seats, passive entry, the Co-Pilot360 driver assistance suite, and the Sasquatch package. That creatively named off-road kit turns the Bronco into a legitimate rock crawler with locking front and rear differentials, a front bash plate, a two-speed transfer case with a pavement-friendly 4Auto mode, and 35-inch Goodyear Wrangler Territory MT tires that do as much for style as they do for capability. A Bronco on knobbies has so much more presence than one rolling on street tires.




