Comparison

FORD EXPLORER vs MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER

Side-by-side comparison of the FORD EXPLORER and MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER drawn from the NHTSA consumer-complaint database, defect investigations, recall history, and NCAP crash-test ratings.

According to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA), more than 2,054,142 consumer complaints have been filed against U.S. vehicles since 1995, as of June 2026. This is a head-to-head safety comparison between the FORD EXPLORER (1977–2025) and the MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER (2003–2025), drawn from that federal complaint and recall record; see our methodology for how the figures are compiled.

The FORD EXPLORER (1977–2025, 43 model years) carries 42,132 NHTSA consumer complaints and 262 safety recalls, while the MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER (2003–2025, 22 model years) carries 1,776 complaints and 115 recalls. Severity indicators for the pair split as follows: 2,324 vs 186 crashes, 975 vs 20 fires, and 282 vs 0 reported fatalities.

Raw complaint counts favor whichever nameplate has fewer vehicles on the road, so the cleaner lens is components: which specific part families concentrate each model's filings? For the FORD EXPLORER, the leading complaint category is steering (3601 filings), followed by unknown or other and power train. For the MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER, it is power train (160), ahead of suspension and electrical system. When the two vehicles cluster around the same component, the problem is likely a shared supplier or a shared federal standard under stress; when they diverge, each nameplate has its own defect signature independent of the other.

NHTSA's New Car Assessment Program gives the FORD EXPLORER an average 4.3/5 crash-test rating versus 3.7/5 for the MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER, aggregated across all model years with published scores. Use the side-by-side table below as your scorecard, but do not treat it as a verdict. Recall counts tell you how many defects the manufacturer has already been compelled to remedy; complaint counts tell you what owners are still flagging today; and safety ratings tell you how the vehicle performs in standardized barrier tests — three different lenses on the same underlying question. The "also compare" links at the bottom of this page let you triangulate against neighboring nameplates in each model's competitive set.

FORD EXPLORER vs MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER — NHTSA complaint, recall, and safety rating comparison
FORD EXPLORER Metric MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER
4.3/5 Avg Safety Rating 3.7/5
42,132 Total Complaints 1,776
262 Total Recalls 115
2,324 Crashes Reported 186
975 Fires Reported 20
3,015 Injuries Reported 141
282 Deaths Reported 0
43 years Years on Market 22 years

Top Complaint Categories

STEERING
3601
0
UNKNOWN OR OTHER
2942
139
POWER TRAIN
2251
160
TIRES:TREAD/BELT
2064
0
POWER TRAIN:AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION
2061
0
SUSPENSION
0
146
ELECTRICAL SYSTEM
0
142
ENGINE
0
127
FORD EXPLORER MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER

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Frequently Asked Questions

Which is safer, FORD EXPLORER or MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER?
FORD EXPLORER has 42,132 total NHTSA complaints with 2324 crashes, while MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER has 1,776 complaints with 186 crashes. Average safety ratings are 4.3/5 vs 3.7/5 respectively.
How many recalls does FORD EXPLORER have compared to MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER?
FORD EXPLORER has 262 recalls across 43 model years, while MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER has 115 recalls across 22 model years.
What are the most common problems with FORD EXPLORER?
The most commonly reported issues for FORD EXPLORER are: STEERING (3601 complaints), UNKNOWN OR OTHER (2942 complaints), POWER TRAIN (2251 complaints), TIRES:TREAD/BELT (2064 complaints), POWER TRAIN:AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION (2061 complaints).
What are the most common problems with MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER?
The most commonly reported issues for MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER are: POWER TRAIN (160 complaints), SUSPENSION (146 complaints), ELECTRICAL SYSTEM (142 complaints), UNKNOWN OR OTHER (139 complaints), ENGINE (127 complaints).

Source: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) complaints and recalls data National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) complaints and recalls data