Elite Dealer

1948 Ford F-1

Indiana

$65,900

1948 Ford F-1

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

F-1

Year

1948

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

383 Stroker

Condition

Excellent

Description

1948 Ford F1 Custom Pick up Purchased from a museum 383 Stroker Auto trans with OD Ice cold air Pristine interior totally custom Ford monogram throughout One of a kind!
Trim: Hot Rod
Body Style: Pickup
Doors: 2

Ford F-1 Buyer's Guide (1948–1952)

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1948–1952
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Ford F-1 was the half-ton model in Ford's first F-series — the truck that established the template every full-size American pickup has followed since. Clean examples are genuinely rare now, values have climbed steadily, and the customs and hot rod builder community has loved this body since the day it was new.
This guide covers
✓ 9-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 4 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Ford F-1 Market Overview

Based on 124 Ford F-1 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

124
Listed Now
$25,742
Avg. Asking Price
1935–2001
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Above Average
This car: $65,900
Low: $2,500 High: $121,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 50% ◄
Manual 27%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 14% ◄
Good 23%
Fair 9%
Poor 3%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 124 listings →
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Ford F-1 Buyer's Guide (1948–1952)

When Ford rolled out the F-series in 1948, they called it "Built stronger to last longer" — and they weren't wrong. The F-1 was a different kind of truck than anything Ford had built before: purpose-designed for work, but styled like something you'd actually want to drive on a Sunday. I've worked on a lot of these over the years, and what still impresses me is how well the cab holds up when it hasn't been abused. Find one that spent its life in a dry climate and wasn't used as a dump truck, and you've got the foundation for something really special.

What to Check Before Buying

Cab corner probe — Probe lower rear cab corners inside and outside — primary structural rust zone
Running board mounts — Check mounting bracket attachment points at lower cab for rust
Floor pan condition — Lift rubber mat and probe cab floor pans
Bed floor crossmembers — Check every crossmember under bed floor — replacement cost depends on how many are good
Firewall inspection — Check firewall for rust from fluid leaks and heat damage
Engine cold start — Start from cold — working flathead V8 adds meaningful value
Flathead head gasket check — Check for white exhaust smoke and oily coolant — inter-passage leak indicator
Frame rail check — Inspect frame rails under cab at mounting points
Door hinge alignment — Check door fit and hinge condition — worn hinges indicate hard use

Common Issues

Cab corner rust is the defining issue — the lower rear cab corners rust from packed debris at the cab-to-bed junction. Floor pan deterioration from condensation and spilled fluids over decades. Bed floor and crossmember deterioration on working trucks is nearly universal — expect to replace the bed floor. Flathead V8 head gasket failure between coolant and combustion passages is the classic flathead failure mode — check for white smoke and oily coolant. Running board mounting bracket rust. Door hinge wear on high-mileage examples. Wiring deterioration on 6-volt systems.

What to Look For

Cab corners — probe lower rear cab corners from inside and outside. Running board mounting brackets at lower cab. Floor pans inside cab under rubber mat. Bed floor crossmembers — check every crossmember for integrity before costing out a bed floor replacement. Firewall for fluid and heat damage. Verify engine runs before accepting any valuation — a running flathead is worth significantly more than a seized core. Check frame rails under cab for rust at mounting points. Door hinges and alignment — worn hinges indicate high mileage or hard use.

Price Guide

Driver quality with running flathead: $18,000–$28,000. Show stock restoration: $32,000–$48,000. Professional custom: $45,000–$80,000+. Award-winning build: $100,000+. Project with significant rust: $6,000–$14,000. Flathead V8 trucks command 15–20% over inline-six versions at equivalent condition. Cab corner repair runs $2,500–$5,000 at a qualified shop — factor into project pricing.

Did You Know?

The F-series nameplate introduced with the F-1 in 1948 is the longest-running continuous model name in American automotive history. Ford's F-150 (direct descendant) has been the best-selling vehicle in the US for over 40 consecutive years. The 1948–1952 F-1 was the first American truck designed from scratch with driver comfort as a primary design objective — previous trucks were built around the engine and cargo, with the driver accommodated as an afterthought.

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