f150
The Best Shocks for the 2021-2026 Ford F150 (Comparison in 2026)
Posted by Sean Reyes on
Shock Surplus · Buyer’s Guide
The 14th gen F-150 spans more use cases than any truck in the lineup — from the 2.7 EcoBoost daily driver to the PowerBoost towing rig to the lifted XLT running trails every weekend. The shock needs are genuinely different. Shock Surplus has put real world miles and seat time on many of these shocks, on this platform, across scouted test tracks doing the same terrain over and over again across various shock packages. Testing Bilstein, Fox, Eibach, and others requires identifying the small differences each of these shocks produces across different terrains and speeds. We’ve had multiple F-150s through the shop, including Steve’s PowerBoost that runs the Eibach Stage 2R daily, and we’ve pulled apart enough shocks to tell you exactly what’s inside them. Here’s the honest breakdown of every option worth considering — starting from the stock shocks so you know exactly what you’re upgrading from.
Shock Surplus · Product Comparison
Find YourPerfect Shock Click any shock to add or remove it. Ratings reflect our team’s actual seat time, not spec sheets.
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Products
Products
Ford OEM
Stock Shocks
Factory Baseline — Where Everyone Starts
Stock OEM
Performance
Road ComfortDaily drive smoothness — pavement, highways, broken asphalt
Trail ComfortDesert washes, forest roads, rock trails, technical terrain
Handling & ControlBody roll reduction, cornering stability, responsiveness
Haul & TowStability under load, sway control, trailer confidence
High Speed OffroadTraction and handling in high speed dirt use
Specs & Materials
Shock DesignInternal construction type & bore
Twin-Tube (OEM)
Monotube 46mm
Monotube 2.6" + Zone Control
Monotube 2.6" + ZC + Reservoir
2.0" IFP Monotube
2.5" Coilover
3.0" IBP Monotube
2.0" Coilover
2.5" Coilover + Reservoir
2.5" Monotube
Body MaterialOuter body construction and finish
Steel / Painted
Steel / Zinc Plated
Steel / Zinc Plated
Steel / Zinc Plated
Aluminum / Clear Anodize
Aluminum / Clear Anodize
Aluminum / Clear Anodize
Steel / Zinc Plated
Aluminum / Clear Anodize
Steel / Zinc Plated
Adjustability
Height AdjustmentFront lift range via coilover collar or perch
Stock Height Only
0" – 2.5" Lift
0" – 2.5" Lift
0" – 3.5" Lift
Stock Height
0" – 3" Lift
0" – 4" Lift
0.5" – 2.5" Lift
0" – 3.5" Lift
1" – 3" Lift
Damping AdjustmentOn-the-fly or external ride quality tuning
Cost & Value
Price PointRelative investment tier — see scale below
Ideal Use Case
Best ForPrimary recommended applications
Honest TakeWhat we actually tell customers
Gets the job done at the speeds Ford intended. Most customers don’t realize what they’ve been missing until they swap these out.
The most popular upgrade we sell for the F-150. Bilstein quality at the lowest entry price. Our default recommendation for daily drivers and towers.
Zone Control is the real story. The 6112 out-handles everything in its price range and still rides respectably on the highway.
Bilstein’s high speed offroad answer. 5-stage damping, Zone Control both ends, remote reservoir. Most technically advanced coilover in this class.
The softest, most plush option in the lineup. If daily highway comfort is your #1 priority, start here. Don’t tow heavy with it.
DSC EVO makes this versatile from daily to desert. Best handling at the limit of anything in this tier. Upgrade the bump stops immediately.
IBP position-sensitive technology is the difference. Best in class at high speed. At $2,500+, it’d better be.
More refined on-road than Bilstein. Better handling than Fox. Steve runs these on his daily F-150 — Eibach Stage 2R fronts, full spring match.
The Cadillac of the lineup. King’s single-speed compression adjuster lets you dial between plush and planted without tools. Best all-rounder at this price point.
More travel than the 6112, more plush than Bilstein. OME’s most well-rounded mid-tier pick for off-road comfort. Doesn’t ask much from you.
Standard Rating
Best in Class
Adequate / Limited
Price Scale
Under $400
$400–$700
$700–$1,200
$1,200–$2,000
$2,000+
Shock Surplus · Every Option, Broken Down Every Shock,
Broken Down Detailed breakdown of each shock for the 2021–2026 F-150
Ford OEM
Stock Shocks
Factory Baseline — Where Everyone Starts
The factory shocks are built to a price point and a liability standard, not a performance standard. They’re adequate. On smooth highways at stock height and stock tire size, you won’t complain. Put 35s on a leveled truck and start driving it the way it was meant to be driven — they fall apart fast. This is your baseline. Everything below is an upgrade.
DesignTwin-Tube (OEM)
BodySteel / Painted
Height Adj.Stock Height Only
Damping Adj.None
The 5100 is the no-explanation-needed answer for most F-150 owners. Leveled truck, occasional trail, regular towing — this shock covers all of it without drama. Bilstein’s digressive valving firms up as inputs get bigger, which is exactly what you want for sway control under a trailer and stability on the highway. It’s not a performance shock. It’s a better-than-stock shock that does exactly what most owners actually need.
DesignMonotube 46mm
BodySteel / Zinc Plated
Height Adj.0" – 2.5" Lift
Damping Adj.None
The 2.6-inch body has 30% more damping ability than the 5100 series, leading to an easier time at all speeds. Handling is the standout here. If you drive your truck like a truck — through corners, on trails, with purpose — the 6112 feels planted where the 5100 floats.
DesignMonotube 2.6" + Zone Control
BodySteel / Zinc Plated
Height Adj.0" – 2.5" Lift
Damping Adj.None
This is Bilstein’s high speed offroad option — a signal to Fox, King, and the rest of the race shock guys that there’s a new, more technically advanced shock in town. Through its 5 stages of damping, the 8112 produces both buttery on-road comfort without sacrificing off-road performance. The remote reservoir handles sustained heat on long trail days, and Zone Control architecture at both ends of travel means the shock is working for you whether you’re crawling or charging. If you add on the double-adjustment through the DSA option, these get even more capable.
DesignMonotube 2.6" + ZC + Reservoir
BodySteel / Zinc Plated
Height Adj.0" – 3.5" Lift
Damping Adj.Compression Adj.
Fox’s linear valving is what makes the 2.0 feel so different from Bilstein on the road. Where Bilstein firms up as inputs get bigger, Fox stays consistent — soft on small bumps, soft on big bumps. On pavement and moderate washboard that’s a genuine luxury. The tradeoff is predictability under load. Fox’s linear valving doesn’t tighten up when you’re pulling a trailer, which is why we don’t recommend it for regular heavy towing. But if you’re driving an unladen F-150 down a highway every day and want the smoothest possible ride, the 2.0 wins.
Design2.0" IFP Monotube
BodyAluminum / Clear Anodize
Height Adj.Stock Height
Damping Adj.None
The 2.5 PE is Fox’s answer for the driver who wants more than comfort — they want control. The DSC EVO adjuster gives you real-time access to a wide damping range: soft enough for a daily commute, firm enough for a desert run. The 2.5-inch body handles heat better than the 2.0 on sustained trail use, and Fox’s coilover architecture gives you proper height adjustment without the compromise of a strut spacer. The caveat we tell every customer: upgrade the bump stops right away. The factory bumpstops aren’t matched to the 2.5 PE’s travel capability.
Design2.5" Coilover
BodyAluminum / Clear Anodize
Height Adj.0" – 3" Lift
Damping Adj.DSC EVO
The 3.0 Factory Race IBP is where the F-150 becomes a legitimate desert runner. IBP (Internal Bypass) means Fox uses a sleeve with precision-drilled bypass ports — the oil bypasses the main piston until the shock approaches end of travel, delivering plush compliance through mid-stroke and progressive resistance near the limits. At high speeds over big terrain, the difference is immediately felt. It’s also 3.0 body diameter, which means significantly more heat capacity than the 2.5. At 35+ mph over rough dirt, nothing else in this guide compares. At $2,500+, the commitment is real — but so is the result.
Design3.0" IBP Monotube
BodyAluminum / Clear Anodize
Height Adj.0" – 4" Lift
Damping Adj.DSC EVO
The Eibach is what we call the ‘Goldilocks Shock’ — not the softest, not the firmest, but tuned for an OEM+ feel that’s genuinely better than stock without being a compromise in either direction. Steve runs the Stage 2R on his PowerBoost for daily driving and light towing. It has more small-bump compliance than Bilstein, a tighter feel than Fox, and Eibach’s spring matching means the front and rear are actually designed to work together. It’s not for the roughest trails or high-speed desert use. For a daily-driven F-150 that needs to be better in every way without sacrificing livability, it fits perfectly.
Design2.0" Coilover
BodySteel / Zinc Plated
Height Adj.0.5" – 2.5" Lift
Damping Adj.None
King’s reputation is built on the 2.5 OEM Series — a shock that feels planted and precise without being harsh. The reservoir is the story: it dramatically increases heat capacity and oil volume compared to a non-reservoir 2.5, which means the King maintains its character over long trail days where a non-reservoir shock fades. The single-speed compression adjuster is genuinely useful — you can tune meaningfully between a plush daily setting and a firmer trail/tow setting in under a minute without tools. For overlanders running constant load, for heavy towers, for daily drivers who need maximum all-around capability, King is the move.
Design2.5" Coilover + Reservoir
BodyAluminum / Clear Anodize
Height Adj.0" – 3.5" Lift
Damping Adj.Compression Adj.
We didn’t expect the MT64 to shine the way it does. Old Man Emu builds shocks for touring rigs — overlanding-focused, comfort-priority, built for sustained mileage on rough roads rather than outright performance. What surprised us was how much travel the MT64 provides for the price, and how well it absorbs repetitive chop without fatiguing you over a full day of driving. It won’t keep up with the Fox 3.0 at high speeds. It won’t tow as confidently as the Bilstein 5100. But for the overlander who wants to cover ground comfortably without breaking the bank on King or Fox Premium hardware, the MT64 is a genuinely good value.
Design2.5" Monotube
BodySteel / Zinc Plated
Height Adj.1" – 3" Lift
Damping Adj.None
Shock Surplus · FAQ Frequently Asked
Questions
01 What are the best aftermarket shocks for a 2021–2026 Ford F-150?
It depends on how you use the truck. For a leveled daily driver that tows on weekends, the Bilstein 5100 is the default answer. For maximum road comfort, the Fox 2.0 wins. For trail use with adjustability, the Fox 2.5 Performance Elite is the driver’s choice. King 2.5 OEM is the comfort-first pick for overlanding. For maximum off-road performance, the Fox 3.0 Factory Race leads the lineup.
02 Do I need new shocks when I install a leveling kit on my F-150?
If you’re running a strut spacer (puck-style), you can keep factory shocks short-term. If you’re running adjustable-height leveling struts, you’re replacing the front coilovers. Do it right and match the shock to your use case.
03 What’s the difference between Bilstein and Fox shocks for the F-150?
Valving. Bilstein uses digressive valving which firms up under load — better for tow sway control and cornering. Fox uses linear valving which is softer and more compliant on small bumps. Bilstein for tow control and handling. Fox for comfort.
04 Which F-150 shocks are best for towing?
Bilstein 5100 at the entry level — digressive valving controls the rebound cycle under trailer weight. For heavier towing with variable loads, the King 2.5 OEM with the compression adjuster is the most capable option. Avoid the Fox 2.0 for regular heavy towing.
05 Do I need upper control arms when I upgrade shocks on my F-150?
At lifts under 2 inches, UCAs are generally not required. Once you’re pushing 2.5 to 3 inches and beyond, UCAs become important to correct caster angle and protect ball joints. If you’re building a 3-inch-plus setup, budget for UCAs.
06 Are the FX4 shocks worth keeping, or should I upgrade?
The FX4 shocks are a step above base-model stock. Once you’ve leveled it, changed tire size, or put miles on them, the upgrade to Bilstein 5100 or 6112 is immediately noticeable — better handling, better tow stability, better trail feedback.
07 What shocks work best on a leveled F-150 with 35-inch tires?
At 35s with real trail use, step up to a 2.5-inch body minimum — the Fox 2.5 Performance Elite or King 2.5 OEM. On pavement, the Bilstein 5100 or 6112 remains a solid choice.
08 Fox 2.5 Performance Elite vs. King 2.5 OEM — which is worth the price?
The Fox 2.5 PE has the DSC EVO adjuster for fast damping adjustment between daily and trail. The King 2.5 OEM is tuned for maximum comfort first and has a reservoir for heat management. Fox for the driver’s shock. King for comfort and load-management priority.
09 Can I just replace the rear shocks on my F-150, or do all four need to go?
You can replace just the rears, but the improvement will feel incomplete. If budget is limited, prioritize fronts first. For a balanced improvement, do all four in the same family.
10 Will upgrading my shocks void my F-150 warranty?
Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, a dealer can’t void your entire warranty because of an aftermarket part. Suspension modifications attract dealer scrutiny, so be aware. Aftermarket shocks won’t void coverage for unrelated components.




