The Ford Mustang Mach-E Just Outsold The Gas Mustang 2 To 1

There’s no other way to put this—the Mach-E just stomped all over the gas Mustang. Ford moved 20,177 Mach-E crossovers last quarter, while the classic pony car limped behind at 9,267 sold. Purists who griped the Mach-E “isn’t a real Mustang” can keep pouting; buyers made their choice with wallets, not nostalgia. That’s more than double the headcount for the EV, and it’s a shockwave through the Blue Oval’s muscle car legacy.

Numbers don’t care about tradition. For years, the V8 was Mustang’s crown, chrome, thunder, rear drive, hair in the wind, and gas fumes swirling. But now, it’s the battery-powered horse setting the pace. All those threads on car forums, all that arguing, irrelevant. Mach-E outsold the coupe and convertible two-to-one. The margin didn’t come from clever marketing alone; federal EV tax credits up for grabs had buyers lining up before the window slammed shut. Even as the credits faded, Ford found ways to keep the incentive alive a bit longer, pushing Mach-E sales even harder while the gas car lost ground.

The regular Mustang saw a modest increase, but nothing close to the Mach-E’s surge. This is raw market reality: when buyers want space, silence, and instant torque, gas engines just aren’t enough. Half a decade ago, this would have sounded like a joke. Now it’s how Ford does business.

The icons are shifting. The Mach-E just lapped the old guard and still isn’t lifting. If anyone’s looking for a meltdown in the Mustang fan clubs, check the comment sections ... they’re burning up, while Mach-E keeps racking up victories one dealer at a time.