2023 Ford Bronco Sport Heritage Limited Review – Beauty Isn't Just Skin Deep

Tim Healey
by Tim Healey

Fast Facts

2023 Ford Bronco Heritage Limited Fast Facts

Powertrain
2.0-liter turbocharged four-cylinder (250 horsepower @ 5,500 RPM, 277 lb-ft @ 3,000 RPM)
Transmission/Drive-Wheel Layout
Eight-speed automatic, four-wheel drive
Fuel Economy, MPG
21city / 26 highway / 23 combined (EPA Rating, MPG)
Fuel Economy, L/100km
11.1 city / 9.0 highway / 10.2 combined. (NRCan Rating, L/100km)
Base Price
$44,655 (U.S.) / $56,649 (Canada)
As-Tested Price
$46,400 (U.S.) / $59,069 (Canada)
Prices include $1,595 destination charge in the United States and $2,195 for freight, PDI, and A/C tax in Canada and, because of cross-border equipment differences, can’t be directly compared.

The 2023 Ford Bronco Sport Heritage Limited is purely all about nostalgia. Thankfully, the platform upon which it’s built is good enough to indulge the trip down memory lane.

In other words, if you’re buying this trim of the Bronco Sport, you’re almost certainly doing so because you like the way it looks and/or you like its nod to the past.


I continue to find the Bronco Sport to be engaging to drive on-road – being on the Escape platform no doubt helps with that – while also being one of the better-looking boxes on the road. I didn’t get the chance to take this tester off-road, but I imagine it has decent capability, since it’s based on the Badlands trim – which I have taken off-road with great success.

The plain Heritage trim is based on the Big Bend trim and has the less-powerful 1.5-liter three-cylinder. Opt for the Heritage Limited and you get the 2.0-liter four – which, trust me, you want.

Either Heritage trim comes with Oxford White accents, including a painted roof and grille, red Bronco lettering for the grille, bodystripes, and 17-inch Oxford White aluminum wheels.

They both also get plaid seats and interior accents in the various available exterior colors.

The Limited adds metal front fender badging, 29-inch all-terrain tires, Oxford White door inserts, center-console badging, and leather-trimmed seats.

Looks aside, the experience is mostly the same as what you’d experience in a Bronco Sport Badlands – though the interior materials are a bit nicer in feel in some areas (sadly, not all) and look better. The on-road ride remains pleasant for most types of suburban driving, and there’s a modicum of handling here – not sportiness, exactly, but a corner on a two-lane can be taken with a bit of aplomb, at least until the box-it-came-in shape and the laws of physics combine to offer up body roll.

The 2.0-liter four has grunt enough for commuting duty and planned passes – though I’d still like more beans. The eight-speed mostly works unnoticed.

It remains a pleasant package. Not as refined as some of the competition, but more engaging to drive and with some semblance of real off-road chops.

Outside of the Heritage Limited stuff, standard or available features included LED headlamps and fog lamps, LED taillamps, roof rack, underseat storage, Ford Co-Pilot 360, an off-road suspension, Sync infotainment, front camera, terrain management, trail control, Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and a twin-clutch rear-drive unit. The Journey Package (includes B&O audio, dual-zone climate control, power moonroof, wireless cell-phone charging, and heated steering wheel) was included.

The only option on my tester was a $150 cargo management system. So we have a base price of $44,655 that with the one option and destination fees climbs to $46,400.

That price is a bit dear – and given that Ford will only build 1,966 units in honor of the Bronco’s birth year, I’d imagine that these fetch a decent penny. I thought they might all be sold out but I found at least two apparently brand-new examples for sale via one of the giant car-shopping sites.

Outside of the Heritage Limited looks, the package here is familiar. Yet the styling looks good enough that I’d consider ticking the option box even without feeling any specific Bronco nostalgia.

I said consider. You can get a well-equipped BS for less, so the looks must matter if you’re springing extra. But should you do so, you’ll get a stylish Sport without compromising anything other than your bank account.

[Images: Ford. Editor's note: The interior is from a Heritage, not a Heritage Limited]

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Tim Healey
Tim Healey

Tim Healey grew up around the auto-parts business and has always had a love for cars — his parents joke his first word was “‘Vette”. Despite this, he wanted to pursue a career in sports writing but he ended up falling semi-accidentally into the automotive-journalism industry, first at Consumer Guide Automotive and later at Web2Carz.com. He also worked as an industry analyst at Mintel Group and freelanced for About.com, CarFax, Vehix.com, High Gear Media, Torque News, FutureCar.com, Cars.com, among others, and of course Vertical Scope sites such as AutoGuide.com, Off-Road.com, and HybridCars.com. He’s an urbanite and as such, doesn’t need a daily driver, but if he had one, it would be compact, sporty, and have a manual transmission.

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  • NJRide NJRide on Nov 29, 2023

    So I own a '21 First Edition which I like trim of better than this car. They wanted over sticker, I refused and I paid MSRP of about 39k at time.


    At first I hated car. After 3 VWs, seats seemed very uncomfortable and it rode very rough. After a while grew to like it more. I have my ups and downs.


    Pros:

    -2.0 is smooth and pretty powerful. However, I can't imagine this car with a 3-cyl

    -I like the styling distinctive compared to much of competition

    -It actually seems screwed together pretty well


    Cons:

    -Cramped backseat and somewhat uncomfortable seats overall. Ford should have made this car inside a little larger, echoes of the Contour from the '90's though these are more popular

    -Sync graphics are old af.

    -Ford dealer experience is meh. No loaners. Bad waiting areas.


    At 51k probably will get out before powertrain/roadside ends at 60k. Ironically considering NX as replacement lol.




    • See 1 previous
    • 3SpeedAutomatic 3SpeedAutomatic on Dec 07, 2023

      It would be soooo nice to get a small V6 in this Escape....oops...Baby Bronco. Turbos scare me....a plain Jane V6 is what's missing.🚗🚗🚗


      And that color..is that mustard yellow, or did baby sh*t fell into the paint can.









  • Kat Laneaux Kat Laneaux on Nov 30, 2023

    @VoGhost - Not getting into politics. Let me say this though. I wouldn't trust Trump as far as I can throw him.

    His history precedes his actions and I am so not ok with it. The devil is the master of lies, unfortunately Trump is not far behind him. The guy is so desperate to stay in office, he might as well be Mussolini, or Putin. He just wants power and to be idolized. It's not about working for the people, he doesn't care about us. Put a camera on him and he wants the glory.

    As I said, his actions speak louder than words.

  • NJRide My mom had the 2005 Ford 500. The sitting higher appealed to her coming out of SUVs and vans (this was sort of during a flattening of the move to non-traditional cars) It was packaged well, more room than 90s Taurus/GM H-Bodies for sure. I do remember the CVT was a little buzzy. I wonder if these would have done better if gas hadn't spiked these and the Chrysler 300 seemed to want to revive US full-size sedans. Wonder what percent of these are still on the road.
  • 28-Cars-Later Mileage of 29/32/30 is pretty pitiful given the price point and powertrain sorcery to be a "hybrid". What exactly is this supposed to be?
  • MRF 95 T-Bird I own a 2018 Challenger GT awd in the same slate gray color. Paid $28k for it in late 2019 as a leftover on the lot. It’s probably worth $23k today which is roughly what this 2015 RT should be going for.
  • Mike978 There is trouble recruiting police because they know they won’t get support from local (Democratic) mayors if the arrests are on favored groups.
  • FreedMike I'm sure that someone in the U.S. commerce department during the 1950s said, "you know, that whole computer thing is gonna be big, and some country is going to cash in...might as well be us. How do we kick start this?" Thus began billions of taxpayer dollars being spent to develop computers, and then the Internet. And - voila! - now we have a world-leading computer industry that's generated untold trillions of dollars of value for the the good old US of A. Would "the market" have eventually developed it? Of course. The question is how much later it would have done so and how much lead time (and capital) we would have ceded to other countries. We can do the same for alternative energy, electric vehicles, and fusion power. That stuff is all coming, it's going to be huge, and someone's gonna cash in. If it's not us, you can damn well bet it'll be China or the EU (and don't count out India). If that's not what you want, then stop grumbling about the big bad gubmint spending money on all that stuff (and no doubt doing said grumbling on the computer and the Internet that were developed in the first place because the big bad gubmint spent money to develop them).
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