Home » The New Ford Bronco Filson Is The Bronco Raptor’s Younger Brother Wearing a Fancy Suit

The New Ford Bronco Filson Is The Bronco Raptor’s Younger Brother Wearing a Fancy Suit

New 2027 Bronco Filson First Edition 33 Copy

What do you get when you cross the Ford Bronco with high-end outdoors outfitter Filson? Well, it’s in the name: you get the Bronco Filson, a premium take on the Blue Oval’s heritage-laden off-roader.

If you don’t know anything about Filson, you may forgive yourself, for I didn’t either. In a sentence, I’d describe them as bougie Carhartt with a splash of Cabela’s hunting spirit, and not in a dog whistley way. They were founded in 1897 and focused on kitting out “prospectors and explorers for the Alaska Gold Rush” with the goal of making something rugged enough to last there for years, saying that they strive to be the “standard of excellence” that was “engineered for utility and longevity.” And if you don’t know Ford, you might be on the wrong site.

Vidframe Min Top
Vidframe Min Bottom

As for how these companies came together, it was a happy set of circumstances where Ford saw Filson as an inspiration for them while developing this generation of the Bronco, and Filson always thought of the style and edge of vintage Broncos when they were developing their apparel. Thanks to that mutual adoration, we have the Bronco Filson, a higher-end approach to the offroader that combines style with performance. Let’s talk about it.

The New Toy

Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 51

Big headline things to get it out of the way: it’s got a Sasquatch package as standard for it, the twin-turbo 3.0-liter V6 out of the Raptor (but in a different state of tune), Fox shocks, a stiffer body, 35-inch tires, and a gaggle of badges to make folks know you have a fancy trim. Ford is describing this car as a premium, rugged SUV, and my mind immediately went to G-Wagons and Grenadiers. Upon seeing it in person, it’s really neither.

At the end of the day, this is still a Bronco, and I’m not saying that in a bad way! They didn’t trick this out with a million options that Mercedes-Benz would offer in a G-Class, nor is it the hyper-tactile yet still luxurious interior of Ineos’ offering. Instead, Ford opted to class up what they already have, like a musician remastering their old records.

Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 76Filson Seat 2 1.1.1Filson Seat 3 1.3.1Filson Seat 1.4.1

The Filson editions have an interior covered in complementary earth tones that feel welcoming and relaxing. The seats are a custom job with a gridded design in the center of the back and the booty portions. Lastly, I think the coolest contribution from Filson is the additional storage found inside.

Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 63Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 64

Filson makes plenty of rugged bags that folks keep for generations to come, and there are two mounted in the rear that you can take off and walk around like a shoulder sling bag. If we’re being honest, I didn’t think they felt like something that’ll last for your grandkids or into the heat death of the universe, but I do sincerely love the look of them and think it’s a genuinely nice and useful addition. Up front are saddle bags as well, that you can put anything saddle bag-sized in!

Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 77Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 88

Other styling cues include rear pillars that color-match the body (and the two new colors are called Field Green Metallic and Iron Sands Copper Metallic), and a tire carrier on the rear stamped with the Bronco and Filson name.

All of this is fine and dandy, but I think the most impressive and important thing here has nothing to do with literally any of this, but is thanks to becoming a premium car.

Use Your Inside Voice

Ed Krenz, the Chief Program Engineer for Bronco, mentioned that folks who go off-roading are typically accepting of compromises like wind and road noise in their off-roader, while higher-end customers simply wouldn’t tolerate it. As a result, they’ve worked like hell to reduce the NVH in this car, coming in at a cool 20% reduction. That’s seriously great.

“What we were uninterested in doing is giving away or trading off the open-air or removable doors to improve the quietness in the cabin,” Krenz said. “So we had to find a more clever way.”

The first thing they did was retool the roof seal in the front so that it almost tapers away in the middle, allowing wind to be ramped over the top.

Top Air Ramp Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 55

The whole point of doing that was to basically ramp the air right over the seals rather than ensuring the seals always had enough compression to withstand direct air,” Krenz said.

Another new approach to deflecting air (which wasn’t on our vehicle, as it’s not a final production model) will be a wedge on the bottom of the mirror that pushes air away from where the front doors meet the fender, a spot that they found to have high air aspiration.

Mirror Wedge

As for the final two things, one was essentially just quality control to make sure all the seals had better fitment, which they’ve struggled with in the past, and the other is having a bunch more soft materials in the interior that can absorb more of the sound that enters the cabin.

Krenz says that they benchmarked some of the other premium SUVs in the market and said they’re around 21-23 sones (a unit ascribed to perceived loudness), while their normal Bronco was roughly 29-30, and while he didn’t disclose what their sone level is now, he says it’s comparable now.

“This product gets us in the zip code of the premium product,” he said. “You can do a hands-free call, and you don’t feel like you’re yelling at the mic. You can hear yourself think.”

I’ve never driven a Bronco for more than a few minutes, but after hearing other folks on the press trip complain about the road noise, I’m confident this will be a welcome improvement to potential buyers. [Ed Note: I have driven a neo-Bronco, and it’s roughly comparable to driving around in a soft-top convertible in a hurricane with a chaser of tire noise. – MS]

A Few Other Goodies For The Pavement

Bronco Filson Griffin Riley Ilce 1 06 03 26 90

We unfortunately weren’t able to drive the car on this trip as it was just a reveal event, but I think it’ll shape up to be a nice ride, and not just because of the better powerplant inside that they say gives you more grunt off the line than the 2.7-liter V6.

To further improve comfort on the Filson, they’ve tuned the suspension to be better for on-road livability with only a slight knock on off-road comfort.

“The trade-off to that is a little bit of more bounce in the off-road space, a little less comfort off-road, no less capability,” Krenz said. He also said the difference in comfort on the dirt road would mean maybe you go one mile per hour slower than you otherwise would, and then you’re about equal on comfort with other Broncos.

They also took a support bar off the Raptor that braces the cant rails in the rear, which created one real issue: visibility. Looking through the rearview would be a nightmare thanks to the support bar blocking the top half of the view and the rear tire carrier blocking the bottom; thus, the Filson comes with a digital rearview mirror mounted to the roof so that it can see above the tire.

All this extra engineering and the extra parts get the Filson a price tag in the mid-70s, which seems okay considering the Bronco Raptor starts at $79,995. Will this perform as well as a Braptor off-road? I’d be damned if it does, but you do have the same powerplant and some beefy tires to get you anywhere you need to go, and you’ll do it in some damn good style. Hell, I’ll give ‘em 70 large for the bags alone, but my parents also say I’m notoriously irresponsible with money, so maybe I’ll just get the car instead.

Topshot image: Ford. All other images are by Griffin Riley unless otherwise noted.

 

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Shooting Brake
Member
Shooting Brake
15 hours ago

Yeah honestly the nvh reduction is the biggest deal here

SonorousSpeedJoe
Member
SonorousSpeedJoe
15 hours ago

I like the interior bits, particularly the NVH improvements, leather dash, and digital rearview mirror. It’d be nice to see them on a regular trim.

Aaronaut
Member
Aaronaut
15 hours ago

For real, can I get a base model with the “Acceptable NVH” package please?

Space
Space
2 hours ago
Reply to  Aaronaut

So a regular Bronco with a can of spray foam?

Elhigh
Elhigh
15 hours ago

Seventy thousand is just too damned much. No sale. Crack Pipe. Fuggedaboutit.

Filson togs are overpriced too, while I’m on the subject of money.

Phil
Phil
15 hours ago

Hardware looks good and that’s no small thing, but for $75K I personally want more than a few soft-touch toupees in that nasty hard plastic interior. It’s also a little alarming that they are still trying to figure out the roof seals this far into the model run.

There are base hardtop 4-door Broncos for $42K on lots here. $75K is a hell of a jump.

Interesting to see who Ford partnered with for bougie outdoors branding now that Eddie Bauer has senesced into a has-been “OK Boomer” brand.

ESO
ESO
12 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Just as it’s only a matter of time before Filson and others become “OK Millennial” brands.

Wait, are we already there yet?

4jim
4jim
15 hours ago

I will be curious about the sales numbers for this and the % of buyers who ever take the roof and doors off.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
15 hours ago

I’ve looked under plenty of used cars and personally have zero concerns about the surface rust showing in the suspension shot, but it does strike me as odd that their reveal car looks like that.

I guess they assume most auto journalists don’t have the kind of standards we enjoy here at the Autopian and won’t take pictures of underbody components, but I bet if you showed that picture to anyone in the target market they would seriously reconsider spending their $70k on this.

Tong Thrower
Member
Tong Thrower
15 hours ago
Reply to  4moremazdas

I missed that because I was distracted by the exposed wiring in the cargo area. Classy.

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
14 hours ago
Reply to  Tong Thrower

I saw that but figured it was the disconnect for the roof to come off.

Weirdly, it is the disconnect, but that’s actually just a fake port to store the disconnected harness when you have the roof off. It looks like they had the roof off at some point but didn’t reconnect the harness when they put it back on.

Right at 2 minutes below:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yYiOx2PxULA

Scott Ross
Member
Scott Ross
16 hours ago

is this the second coming of the Eddie Bauer Explorer?

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
16 hours ago

Filson Schmilson

Noahwayout
Member
Noahwayout
14 hours ago
Reply to  Rob Stercraw

You put the Filson in the Ford, you drink ’em both together.

Anoos
Member
Anoos
16 hours ago

Is this more luxurious / rugged than Eddie Bauer?

I only know these names (brands?) from Ford products.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
16 hours ago

It’ll match my Filson Jacket, god damnit I’m in you sonofabitch!

Hazdazos
Hazdazos
16 hours ago

“get the Filson a price tag in the mid-70s”

LOL

Everything wrong with the auto industry in one sentence.

To be clear, I actually like most of the additions to the Bronco, but no way in hell are the car companies going to normalize $75k for an SUV no matter how much pinhead journalists try to help them. No, Riley, this does not in fact “seem OK”. Base price is about $40k. There isn’t almost TWO base Broncos worth of product here to justify that price.

GrandTouringInjection
Member
GrandTouringInjection
16 hours ago

I like the Bronco, and I like Filson products. With pricing in the mid-70’s, there is no reason to buy it. $70,000 can buy many much nicer and capable off-roaders lightly-used.

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
16 hours ago

I’m gonna wait for the lightly used Filson trim Bronco 🙂

Username Loading....
Member
Username Loading....
16 hours ago

Super interesting to me that what have traditionally been work wear brands end up being seen as premium options simply because they make things that don’t disintegrate after less than a year of use. Very interesting. Maybe there’s something to be learned from that.

No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
Member
No Kids, Lots of Cars, Waning Bikes
13 hours ago

I don’t think Filson has been workwear for a long long time. It’s more polo grounds than oil fields.

Rob Hays
Rob Hays
11 hours ago

A lot of the carry ons for the IAH-Midland/Odessa or Tulsa flights are Filson briefcases. Just saying.

4jim
4jim
17 hours ago

Did I miss it. Does this automatically come with the roof sound reducing insulation that is optional on other Broncos?

Phil
Phil
15 hours ago
Reply to  4jim

This is exactly why I don’t want a convertible 4×4. I’ve got to use mine as a daily and this kind of compromise stops being fun after a while.

4jim
4jim
14 hours ago
Reply to  Phil

Yes I have a big roof rack that keep the hard top on my jeep from being removed. I am OK with never removing the hard top again. My next overlander/off road SUV will probably be a fixed roof thing.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
18 hours ago

I don’t think there are many prospective buyers who’ll intentionally keep custom shaped bags designed for blocking the view out the rear side windows of a Bronco for “generations”.
Maybe hoarders?

TheFanciestCat
Member
TheFanciestCat
21 hours ago

I like the Bronco. I like Filson. I think the NVH improvements are cool..

Still, the phrase “lipstick on a pig” is what comes to mind when I think of an $80,000 Filson Bronco.

DubblewhopperInDubbletrubble
DubblewhopperInDubbletrubble
23 hours ago

“The Bronco Filson, certified parking lot tough, now roaming the lots of Costco and Cabela’s with their Soy boy lattes and camouflage Uggs……”

Albert Ferrer
Member
Albert Ferrer
1 day ago

I was going to say, well they should get closer to premium SUVs as this costs € *whatever* here (€65,375 for a base model with the 2.7 V6 turbo if you are interested).

But it’s already an 80 grand car in the US. If that is not a premium vehicle price we have lost the plot.

86TVan
Member
86TVan
1 day ago

I have a couple of filson bags from the early 2010s. They are damn near indestructible, but heavy. Hoping they haven’t been infected by PE enshitification yet.

House Atreides Combat Pug
Member
House Atreides Combat Pug
1 day ago
Reply to  86TVan

Sadly they have. It’s still nice… but it’s just not what it used to be.

Ferdinand
Member
Ferdinand
17 hours ago

Moved a bunch of production overseas, some saw some quality declines, no prices were lowered.

4jim
4jim
17 hours ago
Reply to  86TVan

To try and avoid PE enshitification I have started to make more of my own outdoor gear it is a lot cheaper and I get to make what I want. It is not hard to wax your own canvas.

Who Knows
Member
Who Knows
12 hours ago
Reply to  4jim

Might soon be time to follow David’s lead and start making your own vehicles as well?

4jim
4jim
12 hours ago
Reply to  Who Knows

His adventure helped me burry my desire to build a CJ-8 from scratch.

Ferdinand
Member
Ferdinand
11 hours ago
Reply to  4jim

Like you said, waxing canvas ain’t the hard part. It’s sourcing quality canvas and then knowing how to sew it into a jacket (or backpack, or whatever).

I’ve got zero use for a wax canvas tarp. I wouldn’t mind a (un-waxed) canvas tent…

4jim
4jim
10 hours ago
Reply to  Ferdinand

Just try and learn. watch youtube videos. I have made lots of stuff and buy the canvas I want from a fabric warehouse. People learn to fix cars they can learn to make a tent. Bags, bedrolls, anoraks are easy starter projects.

Ferdinand
Member
Ferdinand
10 hours ago
Reply to  4jim

Oh for sure. It ain’t impossible, but I’m not sure I would say a tent isn’t “hard”.

There’s a reason why a Springbar costs what they do.

Wuffles Cookie
Wuffles Cookie
13 hours ago
Reply to  86TVan

Sadly, yes they have. They were first bought out by PE in 2005, but production was kept local (so your 2010 bags are probably OK). But they sold again in 2018 and full offshoring happened. Now in 2026 they are completely enshittified.

Last edited 13 hours ago by Wuffles Cookie
86TVan
Member
86TVan
11 hours ago
Reply to  Wuffles Cookie

That’s too bad. My bags have “Made in USA” tags and have taken years of real abuse without any problems. Briefcase showing some wear and tear, but still fully functional.

Pat Rich
Pat Rich
1 day ago

testing the waters for this Lincoln Bronco I keep hearing about.

RobN
RobN
1 day ago

I sat in one of these recently at a market research event. Was it nice? Yes. Was it as nice as the G Wagon, Defender, GX, or Rivian it was sitting next to that they were trying to position it against? Not even close. Decent NVH tweaks that should trickle down across the Bronco line though, so that’s something.

Last edited 1 day ago by RobN
Hugh Crawford
Member
Hugh Crawford
1 day ago

Complementary earth tones?

Hey, that dusty look is really hot!

I dig the mud wrestling/oilfield roughneck thing, and you’re really sticking it!

Hey big boy, you want wipe the mud off your boots at my place?

Hold my shovel?

Box Rocket
Box Rocket
12 hours ago
Reply to  Hugh Crawford

ComplEmentary vs complImentary

Hugh Crawford
Member
Hugh Crawford
9 hours ago
Reply to  Box Rocket

Yeah yeah, it’s the sediment that counts, don’t muddy the water.

Space
Space
1 day ago

The autopian has gotta get you into an off road driving event soon, do they still do the Bronco Off-rodeo?

I love the pictures, especially the trees

McLovin
Member
McLovin
1 day ago

Filson make quality stuff IMO. Everything I have bought from them even 10+ years ago is still going strong. Those bags will be around a shitload longer than the car they are attached to.

Rod Millington
Rod Millington
1 day ago

My favourite part was where they said they made it quieter by vaguely giving a shit about wind sealing.

86-GL
86-GL
1 day ago
Reply to  Rod Millington

I wonder if they could do this to all the Broncos.

Rod Millington
Rod Millington
1 day ago
Reply to  86-GL

“How did you improve the 2027 Bronco?”

“Oh we just decided to pay some attention to build quality.”

Mr E
Member
Mr E
16 hours ago
Reply to  Rod Millington

Like preventing the power windows from bouncing back on a constant basis like my ’25?

That would be great. In the meantime, back to the service dept I go…

That being said, I think anyone buying a convertible vehicle – especially one shaped like a flying brick – and expecting it to be quiet is rather deluded.

Hugh Crawford
Member
Hugh Crawford
9 hours ago
Reply to  Rod Millington

I would totally be in favor of car companies marketing on that basis.

That was essentially VW’s American ad campaign for a couple decades.

“We got rid of the stuff that breaks and tidied the rest up” would work for me too.

Drive By Commenter
Member
Drive By Commenter
18 hours ago
Reply to  Rod Millington

“Quality is job 168,294,229”

4moremazdas
Member
4moremazdas
16 hours ago
Reply to  Rod Millington

My thoughts exactly. “All the Broncos on the road now are built wrong, so we figured we’d just not do that and charge more.”

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