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Ford Bronco Photos & Pictures

The Ford Bronco is a body-on-frame 4x4 sold in two distinct full-size eras separated by a 25-year gap, plus a smaller Ranger-based model that shared the name. The first generation (1966-1977) was a compact utility on a 92-inch wheelbase, offered as the U13 open roadster (1966-1968) and the U14 half-cab pickup (1966-1972), with the U15 wagon (1966-1977) the only body style from 1973 onward, and a Ford 9-inch rear axle throughout and a switch from the Dana 30 to the Dana 44 front axle for 1971. Ford made the Bronco full-size for the second generation (1978-1979), building it on the F-series "Dentside" body, and carried that big-truck formula through the Bullnose third generation (1980-1986), the Bricknose fourth generation (1987-1991), and the OBS fifth generation (1992-1996). A separate compact, the Bronco II (1984-1990), rode on the Ranger platform and was never a full-size Bronco. Ford discontinued the full-size Bronco after the 1996 model year and revived the nameplate for 2021 as the sixth generation, a body-on-frame SUV with EcoBoost engines, a removable top and doors, and Sasquatch and Raptor variants.

385,064 photos 6,553 registered 6 generations

Pick your generation

Each generation page covers what changed year by year, what owners call them, and the wall of registered vehicles.

By model year

The wall

The most-documented Ford Broncos in the registry, every photo by the owner.

Ford Bronco“SOLD Apr22 Bare Frame”1976 Bronco · Steve83270 photos Ford Bronco“Rose”1990 Bronco · Beequewl270 photos Ford Bronco“2bitbronco”1993 Bronco · 2bitbronco269 photos Ford Bronco“donkey/ big ugly”1983 Bronco · loganjabrams268 photos Ford Bronco1993 Bronco1993 Bronco · xjakethesnakex267 photos Ford Bronco1984 Bronco1984 Bronco · Matthew Connolly267 photos Ford Bronco“drexelsteve's”1979 Bronco · Kal lure266 photos Ford Bronco1988 Bronco1988 Bronco · michael fitzgerald265 photos Ford Bronco1978 Bronco1978 Bronco · david c264 photos Ford Bronco“RANGER XLT”1978 Bronco · 4XPepe263 photos Ford Bronco“Flat-tabulous”1967 Bronco · Fordfilly263 photos Ford Bronco“The Pheonix”1978 Bronco · Craig Cherry263 photos Ford Bronco1993 Bronco1993 Bronco · chucklebill262 photos Ford Bronco“Patches - RIP”1989 Bronco · Shannon Courier261 photos Ford Bronco1996 Bronco1996 Bronco · Brad Woods260 photos Ford Bronco“Blastin' Assassin”1996 Bronco · AKMand44s258 photos Ford Bronco“Two Face”1990 Bronco · Jason Thorn258 photos Ford Bronco“89 Bronco”1989 Bronco · Spktyr255 photos Ford Bronco1986 Bronco1986 Bronco · chris_wei17253 photos Ford Bronco“Super Bronco”1990 Bronco · Supersanbob253 photos Ford Bronco“Red”1978 Bronco · Matt I251 photos Ford Bronco“The Solid Silver Bronco”1996 Bronco · dash_cam250 photos Ford Bronco1986 Bronco1986 Bronco · Rodolfo Mario Novo250 photos Ford Bronco“BIG DAWG2”1993 Bronco · massbronco250 photos Ford Bronco“Big78Bronco”1978 Bronco · Big78BroncoWA249 photos Ford Bronco“Dylans 86 XLT”1986 Bronco · Dylan Corbett248 photos Ford Bronco“Mellow Yellow”1988 Bronco · mrlaserboy247 photos Ford Bronco1996 Bronco1996 Bronco · Agilt00243 photos Ford Bronco“nightmare”1988 Bronco · Robert Stafford243 photos Ford Bronco“HillBilly Heaven”1979 Bronco · Monstermiler241 photos Ford Bronco1996 Bronco1996 Bronco · rmilleruga238 photos Ford Bronco“Turd”1978 Bronco · Ken McCarthy238 photos Ford Bronco1995 Bronco1995 Bronco · ANGELO190471237 photos Ford Bronco“Phat Ho”1978 Bronco · 78Bronco460237 photos Ford Bronco“Eddie”1994 Bronco · 89bronco302236 photos Ford Bronco“Blue Thunder”1979 Bronco · Thomas Nelson236 photos Ford Bronco1990 Bronco1990 Bronco · Brian Bruzewski234 photos Ford Bronco1996 Bronco1996 Bronco · 96UAV233 photos Ford Bronco“Elizabeth”1992 Bronco · MuddSlinger92233 photos Ford Bronco“L.I. Monster Bronco”1994 Bronco · bigbad94bronco233 photos Ford Bronco1986 Bronco1986 Bronco · stevenravenscroft229 photos Ford Bronco1995 Bronco1995 Bronco · muddog899229 photos Ford Bronco1978 Bronco1978 Bronco · Kenny714228 photos Ford Bronco1985 Bronco1985 Bronco · Nathaniel Strawn226 photos Ford Bronco“the bronc”1992 Bronco · jimmy dolan226 photos Ford Bronco“Betty”1979 Bronco · tcdixon224 photos Ford Bronco“Lumpy”1988 Bronco · Brian Clarke224 photos Ford Bronco1990 Bronco1990 Bronco · danjones223 photos Ford Bronco“The Debris Dodger”1990 Bronco · stormfinder222 photos Ford Bronco“pukin' dogII”1996 Bronco · miesk5222 photos Ford Bronco1978 Bronco1978 Bronco · 78brncoxlt221 photos Ford Bronco“NDIXIE”1995 Bronco · Frank Clements221 photos Ford Bronco1989 Bronco1989 Bronco · D-diesel220 photos Ford Bronco“OJ”1994 Bronco · Dave Love220 photos Ford Bronco“SpareParts”1983 Bronco · David Lindemeyer219 photos Ford Bronco“Go Fast-ish Build”1978 Bronco · CrazyBRONCOguy218 photos Ford Bronco“BigBlue”1996 Bronco · bigbluebronk218 photos Ford Bronco“Big Blue Beast”1985 Bronco · Josh Benfield218 photos Ford Bronco“Beastly Bronc”1982 Bronco · Cory Seiber217 photos Ford Bronco“???”1978 Bronco · bajamanjc215 photos

At a glance

  • What it is: Ford's body-on-frame 4x4, sold 1966-1996 and again from 2021
  • Full-size Bronco generations: 2nd (1978-1979), 3rd (1980-1986), 4th (1987-1991), 5th (1992-1996)
  • Compact Bronco generations: 1st (1966-1977, 92-inch wheelbase), plus the separate Ranger-based Bronco II (1984-1990)
  • Revival: 6th generation, 2021-2026, body-on-frame, 2.3L and 2.7L EcoBoost
  • Hiatus: no Bronco was built for the 1997-2020 model years
  • Not a Bronco: the Bronco Sport (2021+) is a separate unibody, car-based crossover

Ford Bronco generations at a glance

GenerationYearsPlatform & bodySignature enginesWhat changed
1st (early Bronco) 1966-1977 Dedicated compact 4x4, 92-inch wheelbase; U13 roadster (1966-1968), U14 half-cab (1966-1972), U15 wagon (1966-1977) 170 cu in I6 at launch, 289 cu in V8 (1966-1968), 302 cu in V8 (from 1969) Launched the nameplate as a small utility 4x4. Ford 9-inch rear axle throughout; Dana 30 front axle 1966-1970, upgraded to the Dana 44 for 1971; power front disc brakes added for 1976.
2nd (first full-size) 1978-1979 F-series "Dentside" body, 104-inch wheelbase 351 cu in (5.8L) and 400 cu in (6.6L) V8 The Bronco became a full-size truck sharing the F-100/F-150 cab and front sheetmetal. Two model years only before the body changed. Removable fiberglass rear top.
3rd (Bullnose) 1980-1986 F-series "Bullnose" body 300 cu in (4.9L) I6, 302 cu in (5.0L) and 351 cu in (5.8L) V8 Introduced Ford's Twin-Traction Beam (TTB) independent front suspension on 4x4 models, replacing the solid front axle. Lighter, more aerodynamic body to improve fuel economy.
4th (Bricknose) 1987-1991 F-series "Bricknose" body 300 cu in (4.9L) I6, 302 cu in (5.0L) and 351 cu in (5.8L) V8 Adopted electronic fuel injection across the engine range and added rear-wheel anti-lock brakes. Flush headlamps and revised grille distinguish it from the Bullnose.
5th (OBS) 1992-1996 Updated F-series body (the "OBS" / Old Body Style) 5.0L (302) and 5.8L (351 Windsor) V8s Rounder body, a driver-side airbag and a center high-mount stop lamp arrived in this era. Last full-size Bronco; the white 1993 Bronco of the O.J. Simpson chase is this generation. Discontinued after 1996.
Bronco II (separate compact) 1984-1990 Ranger platform, compact 2-door 2.8L Cologne V6 (1984-1985), 2.9L Cologne V6 (1986-1990) Not a full-size Bronco. A smaller, Ranger-based SUV with a fixed roof, built alongside the full-size truck; replaced by the Explorer for 1991.
6th (revival) 2021-2026 Body-on-frame, 2-door and 4-door 2.3L EcoBoost I4, 2.7L EcoBoost V6 (Bronco Raptor: 3.0L EcoBoost V6) Revived the nameplate after a 25-year gap. Removable doors and roof, a 7-speed manual option on the four-cylinder, the off-road Sasquatch package, and the high-output Bronco Raptor from 2022.

The Bronco story by era

Ford introduced the Bronco for the 1966 model year as a compact 4x4 on a dedicated 92-inch-wheelbase chassis, sold as the doorless U13 roadster (1966-1968), the U14 half-cab pickup (1966-1972), and the U15 wagon (1966-1977). The half-cab was discontinued after 1972, leaving the wagon as the only body style from 1973 onward. This first generation ran through 1977 and is what enthusiasts call the "early Bronco." It used a Ford 9-inch rear axle for all years, a Dana 30 front axle from 1966 through 1970, the stronger Dana 44 front axle from 1971 onward, and gained power front disc brakes for 1976.

For 1978 Ford scrapped the small chassis and made the Bronco full-size, sharing the cab and front structure of the F-series pickup. This second generation (1978-1979) used the F-series "Dentside" body and lasted only two model years. The full-size Bronco then tracked the F-series through three more bodies: the Bullnose third generation (1980-1986), which introduced Twin-Traction Beam independent front suspension; the Bricknose fourth generation (1987-1991), which brought fuel injection and rear anti-lock brakes; and the OBS fifth generation (1992-1996), which added a driver airbag and was the final full-size Bronco before Ford ended the line.

Full-size Bronco vs. Bronco II vs. Bronco Sport

Three separate vehicles have worn "Bronco" branding. The full-size Bronco (1978-1996) is a large body-on-frame truck built on the F-series platform. The Bronco II (1984-1990) is a separate, smaller SUV built on the compact Ranger pickup platform, powered by Cologne V6 engines; it was sold at the same time as the full-size truck and was replaced by the Ford Explorer for 1991. The Bronco Sport, introduced for 2021 alongside the sixth-generation Bronco, is a unibody, car-based crossover on Ford's C2 front-drive architecture and shares no chassis with the body-on-frame Bronco. The first-generation Bronco (1966-1977) was also compact, but unlike the Bronco II it rode on its own dedicated 92-inch-wheelbase 4x4 chassis, not a pickup platform.

The 1996-2021 hiatus and the 2021 revival

Ford discontinued the full-size Bronco after the 1996 model year, with U.S. buyers shifting toward the four-door Expedition and Explorer SUVs; no vehicle wore the Bronco name for the 1997 through 2020 model years. Ford revived the Bronco for the 2021 model year as the sixth generation, a body-on-frame SUV offered in two-door and four-door forms with removable doors and roof panels. The revived Bronco uses 2.3L EcoBoost four-cylinder and 2.7L EcoBoost V6 engines, offers a seven-speed manual on the four-cylinder, includes the off-road-focused Sasquatch package, and added the high-output Bronco Raptor (3.0L EcoBoost V6) for 2022.

How to tell the Bronco generations apart

Size is the first cue: a Bronco on a 92-inch wheelbase with a one-piece removable top or open body is a first-generation early Bronco (1966-1977). Any large, F-series-sized two-door wagon with a removable rear top is a full-size Bronco (1978-1996), and the four full-size generations are told apart by their F-series sheetmetal: the Dentside (1978-1979), the Bullnose (1980-1986), the flush-headlamp Bricknose (1987-1991), and the rounded OBS (1992-1996). A small two-door SUV from the 1980s with Ranger styling is a Bronco II (1984-1990), not a full-size Bronco. A modern Bronco with boxy retro styling and removable doors is a sixth-generation truck (2021-2026), while a smaller rounded crossover badged Bronco Sport is the separate unibody model.

Frequently asked questions

What years was the Ford Bronco made?

The Ford Bronco was built for the 1966 through 1996 model years, then revived from 2021. The first generation ran 1966-1977, the full-size generations covered 1978-1996, and after a 25-year gap the sixth generation arrived for 2021. The separate Bronco II, a compact Ranger-based model, was sold 1984-1990.

Why did Ford stop making the Bronco?

Ford ended the full-size Bronco after the 1996 model year. The two-door body-on-frame format was losing ground to roomier four-door SUVs, and Ford's plant capacity and buyer demand were shifting to the Expedition and Explorer. No Bronco was built for the 1997 through 2020 model years until Ford revived the nameplate for 2021.

What is the difference between a Bronco and a Bronco II?

The full-size Bronco (1978-1996) is a large body-on-frame truck on the F-series platform. The Bronco II (1984-1990) is a separate, smaller SUV built on the compact Ranger pickup platform with Cologne V6 power. They were sold at the same time and are not the same vehicle; the Bronco II was replaced by the Ford Explorer for 1991.

Which Bronco generation is the O.J. Simpson Bronco?

The white Bronco from the June 1994 televised pursuit was a 1993 Ford Bronco, which belongs to the fifth generation (1992-1996), the "OBS" or Old Body Style full-size Bronco. It was the last full-size Bronco generation before Ford discontinued the line after 1996.

What is an OBS Bronco?

"OBS" stands for Old Body Style and refers to the fifth-generation full-size Bronco of 1992-1996, built on the rounded final-iteration F-series body. This generation added a driver-side airbag and a center high-mount stop lamp, and it was the last full-size Bronco Ford produced before the 1997-2020 hiatus.

Sources

  • Ford factory shop manuals, parts catalogs, and sales literature for the Bronco and F-series
  • VIN and door-data-plate body-code decoding (U13/U14/U15 first-generation series)
  • Established Bronco reference works, owner registries, and club technical archives
  • Period road tests and contemporary automotive press coverage

Asked all the time

What years was the Ford Bronco made?

The Ford Bronco was built for the 1966 through 1996 model years, then revived from 2021. The first generation ran 1966-1977, the full-size generations covered 1978-1996, and after a 25-year gap the sixth generation arrived for 2021. The separate Bronco II, a compact Ranger-based model, was sold 1984-1990.

Why did Ford stop making the Bronco?

Ford ended the full-size Bronco after the 1996 model year. The two-door body-on-frame format was losing ground to roomier four-door SUVs, and Ford's plant capacity and buyer demand were shifting to the Expedition and Explorer. No Bronco was built for the 1997 through 2020 model years until Ford revived the nameplate for 2021.

What is the difference between a Bronco and a Bronco II?

The full-size Bronco (1978-1996) is a large body-on-frame truck on the F-series platform. The Bronco II (1984-1990) is a separate, smaller SUV built on the compact Ranger pickup platform with Cologne V6 power. They were sold at the same time and are not the same vehicle; the Bronco II was replaced by the Ford Explorer for 1991.

Which Bronco generation is the O.J. Simpson Bronco?

The white Bronco from the June 1994 televised pursuit was a 1993 Ford Bronco, which belongs to the fifth generation (1992-1996), the "OBS" or Old Body Style full-size Bronco. It was the last full-size Bronco generation before Ford discontinued the line after 1996.

What is an OBS Bronco?

"OBS" stands for Old Body Style and refers to the fifth-generation full-size Bronco of 1992-1996, built on the rounded final-iteration F-series body. This generation added a driver-side airbag and a center high-mount stop lamp, and it was the last full-size Bronco Ford produced before the 1997-2020 hiatus.