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Beware of buying a Ford Ecoboost to avoid financial disaster

45 replies

m95 · 03/01/2026 14:26

A tip and a warning - if this helps one person avoid an Ecoboom disaster, then it's worth it.

This also applies to any other car with a wet belt, but Ecoboosts are particularly nightmarish to deal with if (when) they go wrong because of how big of a job it is to change the wet belt.

When I purchased my car a few years ago, my idea was to buy a car that had done its initial post MOT-free depreciation and would last the next 100k+ miles - so I got one that was just over 20k mileage and paid off the finance as soon as I could to avoid paying the interest, so I was able to save £1k of interest that way.

I had it serviced every year, approx. every 10k miles, which is more often than Ford's 18k/2 year recommendation.

The car was a 2019 Mk4 1.0L Ecoboost Focus automatic, which has a timing chain and a wet oil pump belt. This was supposed to fix the issues which were well documented in the MK3 Focus engines, but it does not as they retained the wet oil pump belt.

The car only reached 56k before the wet oil pump belt shredded, starving the engine of oil and causing damage with metal present in the sump which is likely to be parts of the bearings. I was lucky enough that it didn't totally destroy it, and I was able to spend £1.5k to replace the wet belt and then sell the car on to a dealer for £7.5k. Ford were not interested at all in offering goodwill towards this, and there is no recall on these models.

This was supposed to be a sensible financial decision to avoid paying high maintenance costs on an old car (sort of bangernomics), and I could have easily lost over £7k just before Christmas. No car on 56k miles at this age should be blowing up when serviced every year, and it is shocking that Ford offer no assistance when it does. Your only options are often an entirely new engine (~9k from Ford, or 4k from Pumaspeed) or to scrap the car for a few hundred.

In the end, I bought a Toyota Auris instead. I have heard similar disastrous stories about the Stellantis Puretech 1.2l engines.

Even in the best possible case where you are lucky enough to catch a degrading wet belt in time, you're paying £1-2k every time you replace it which in reality should be done every 30-40k or so instead of Ford's recommended 150k which is insane (ever heard of an Ecoboost belt lasting that long?). Additionally, most garages won't touch the wet belt job as it's so hard to get to and replace it. If you do choose to keep it you must service with the right spec oil (many garages don't have this as standard).

So, why not buy similarly priced non wet belt competitor cars where you don't have this guaranteed cost and risk of sudden catastrophic failure which will cause a big financial hit that may be extremely unaffordable to many, especially if they still have outstanding finance.

This happened just before the birth of my second child and caused no end of stress. I hope other families can avoid this by not buying a Ford Ecoboost.

OP posts:
joeninetey · 03/01/2026 20:25

No words. Except maybe 'criminal' ! Made better cars 30 years back imo.

m95 · 03/01/2026 21:49

I've had a 2005 Fiesta, a 2012 1.25l Fiesta and a 2017 1.5L diesel Focus - all of those were great, sad to see Ford hasn't prioritised reliability on these Ecoboosts, and still didn't fix the issue on the redesigned mk4 (2019+) 1.0L Ecoboost.

OP posts:
EnglishRain · 03/01/2026 22:00

I have a 2019 focus on 52k miles. What should I ask the garage to look for, to inspect the wet belt..?

joeninetey · 03/01/2026 22:02

m95 · 03/01/2026 21:49

I've had a 2005 Fiesta, a 2012 1.25l Fiesta and a 2017 1.5L diesel Focus - all of those were great, sad to see Ford hasn't prioritised reliability on these Ecoboosts, and still didn't fix the issue on the redesigned mk4 (2019+) 1.0L Ecoboost.

Yes, the Zetec engine was one of the best engines available at any price. Mind, built in collaboration with Mazda.

m95 · 03/01/2026 22:40

EnglishRain · 03/01/2026 22:00

I have a 2019 focus on 52k miles. What should I ask the garage to look for, to inspect the wet belt..?

It's a tricky one because even though it's considered a service item, it's not easy to check (classic Ford) - I got my local mobile mechanic to remove the sump to inspect the oil and the oil pump wet belt, this job in itself is about £300-400 if done without changing the belt. I think the cheapest you can get the belt replaced for is about £900ish and this goes all the way up to over £2k, since it's a big job - removing the sump, taking off the timing cover, replacing the timing chain and tensioner, then the wet belt, and then putting it all back together.

On your current mileage, comparing to my situation, I reckon my belt was already degrading at that point. Some people have had engines/belts go at less than that too.

If I could go back in time, I would have sold the car privately before any damage was done to the engine and avoid the wet belt bill and the stress. I wouldn't have tried selling it privately after it did have damage, as I wouldn't have wanted to screw someone over. However, if I were intent on keeping the car, I would get the wet belt replaced ASAP - and then be sure to service it very regularly (e.g. oil changes every 6k) with the correct specification of oil - I believe this is WSS-M2C948-B for these engines.

OP posts:
m95 · 03/01/2026 22:41

joeninetey · 03/01/2026 22:02

Yes, the Zetec engine was one of the best engines available at any price. Mind, built in collaboration with Mazda.

Ah, the collaboration with Mazda makes the reliability make a lot more sense!

OP posts:
hmdxm1 · 03/01/2026 22:43

We had to get ours done last year, managed to get it to 10 years and 100,000 miles though! Cost £1800 with Ford, it’s just our second run around car, now we’ve spent that much on it we’ve just resigned to keep it for DC. But yes, won’t be buying another.

Oldermumofone · 03/01/2026 22:58

A good warning. We had the same issue with Peugeot 2008 - wasn’t worth fixing and got very little for it.

Isthisit2025 · 03/01/2026 23:04

I have a 2016 fiesta ecoboost. Wet belt changed (Jan 2025) at 95k costing around 1200 (privately) Thought I had researched enough before buying but wasn’t aware until 18 months ago re wet belt. It’s been a fab low maintenance car. I hope it limps along for another few years!

Lonelycrab · 03/01/2026 23:09

Honda civic owner here

14 years old and on 100k miles

Not a single problem. Tyres and brakes and wiper blades is all I’ve bought.

Buy a Ford (or any non cam chain engine) at your peril.

QueenOfHiraeth · 03/01/2026 23:14

We've just had the same problem on a Peugeot 5008. Luckily no damage other than replacing wet belt but an expensive and unexpected fault

ClawClip1 · 03/01/2026 23:14

I don’t even own one of these but they’re nicknamed ecobooms for a reason.

(and another nod for a honda)

m95 · 03/01/2026 23:18

Oldermumofone · 03/01/2026 22:58

A good warning. We had the same issue with Peugeot 2008 - wasn’t worth fixing and got very little for it.

I know someone who had this issue on a 2020 Vauxhall Grandland, wet belt clogged up the oil strainer and seized the engine. So, Stellantis group cars are best avoided as well - however, to their credit, they did cover the cost of the wet belt repair which Ford doesn't seem as interested in doing. By some miracle, their engine survived even with zero oil pressure.

OP posts:
WinterWooliesBaa · 03/01/2026 23:25

I ned to read this again tomorrow. I have a 2015 Focus, how would I know if it has a wet belt?

Lonelycrab · 03/01/2026 23:31

WinterWooliesBaa · 03/01/2026 23:25

I ned to read this again tomorrow. I have a 2015 Focus, how would I know if it has a wet belt?

Google the exact model you own and ask if it has a wet belt

Isthisit2025 · 04/01/2026 08:15

Just wanted to add that I have had my 2016 Fiesta from brand new so I know the history of the car.

m95 · 04/01/2026 10:27

Isthisit2025 · 04/01/2026 08:15

Just wanted to add that I have had my 2016 Fiesta from brand new so I know the history of the car.

Nice one, you must have maintained it well! Anecdotally it seems somewhat luck of the draw; some people's do go for a long time on independent servicing, whilst others fail under 50k with full Ford service history. Sadly we don't have any stats on it.

OP posts:
Isthisit2025 · 04/01/2026 11:30

@m95 I think luck of the draw (which generally is not the case for me!) I’ve never been that regular with servicing but I remember talking to somebody about 5 (ish) years ago. He remarked on me having an ecoboost (I’d no idea back then of the issues) and all he said was “they are great cars, if you do nothing else ensure you change the oil very very regularly”. I never forgot that and upped my game a bit afterwards.

I researched a lot in the year preceding the wet belt change, so lots of groups etc. there were people who’d done everything ‘right’ but unfortunately still came unstuck.

Shade17 · 04/01/2026 12:23

Lonelycrab · 03/01/2026 23:09

Honda civic owner here

14 years old and on 100k miles

Not a single problem. Tyres and brakes and wiper blades is all I’ve bought.

Buy a Ford (or any non cam chain engine) at your peril.

Even Honda have been playing the wet belt game recently. As for chain driven engines there are quite a few with notorious chain issues.

Alfiemoon1 · 04/01/2026 15:22

We had the same issue with the 2014 Peugeot 208 we bought dd only 42k on the clock wasn’t worth fixing according to the few mechanics we asked

Doris86 · 04/01/2026 16:13

m95 · 03/01/2026 21:49

I've had a 2005 Fiesta, a 2012 1.25l Fiesta and a 2017 1.5L diesel Focus - all of those were great, sad to see Ford hasn't prioritised reliability on these Ecoboosts, and still didn't fix the issue on the redesigned mk4 (2019+) 1.0L Ecoboost.

The 1.25 Fiesta engine was a Japanese engine designed by Yamaha. It has a reputation of being a very reliable and virtually indestructible engine. I have the 1.6 version of it in my 2012 Focus and never had a problem with it.

There is someone I read about once who has a car with one of these engines that has done 700k miles.

The Ecoboost certainly seems a step backwards in terms of reliability.

Lonelycrab · 04/01/2026 18:54

Shade17 · 04/01/2026 12:23

Even Honda have been playing the wet belt game recently. As for chain driven engines there are quite a few with notorious chain issues.

Apart from the 3 cylinder 1 litre mk10 Civic (which most reviews advised to steer clear of because it’s gutless) all the modern Hondas as far as I can see (Hrv,Crv, Civic mk11) use chains.

So hardly any use wet belts and it doesn’t seem to be a trend for them.

Tollington · 04/01/2026 19:07

It’s know as the eco-boom for this reason

Fluteytooting · 04/01/2026 19:13

I have a ford ecoboost and a few years ago the engine failed. I went back and forth with ford headoffice for ages with them digging their heals in but eventually I managed to get them to replace the engine for free! I count myself very lucky as I’m not really sure why they changed their tune. They blamed my local garage for ‘dropping something’ somewhere in the engine, which was obviously a load of rubbish. With that and the never ending door seal problem they’ve ensured I’ll never buy one again.

TeenToTwenties · 04/01/2026 19:17

You are right. I very nearly bought one last year but DH did his research and strongly advised me against. I would have been worried the whole time.

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