2023 Ford Escape AWD First Drive: Finding Focus

Ford’s beloved hatchback may actually still be with us after all in this small SUV.

Dodge Neon, Caliber, and Dart. Chevrolet Cavalier, Cobalt, and Cruze. The Ford Escort and Focus. Over the past few decades all three of America’s mainline automakers attempted to build a compact sedan or hatchback with broad appeal only to eventually give up. When Ford, followed by Stellantis and GM, announced it was giving up on cars to focus on crossovers, SUVs, and trucks, many bemoaned the death of the American car. Yet our drive of the updated-for-2023 Ford Escape proves that the car is alive and has been thriving right under our noses this entire time!

What’s New With The Ford Escape?

The demise of the Focus in 2018 left Ford the wiggle room it needed to broaden its compact SUV offerings. The new-for-2020 Escape was slightly more car-like than the version it replaced. Designed primarily for city slickers and suburbanites, the Escape looked a bit less rugged and a touch more premium than the older model, leaning into a slew of powertrain options and tech features to win over buyers. The Ford Bronco Sport picked up the slack on the rugged end of the spectrum, catering to the compact buyers who might like more traditional SUVs, or who like to go off-roading.

With the Escape’s 2023 midcycle update, the SUV has gotten even more car-like, picking up where the Focus hatch left off. Although it’s dimensionally identical to the pre-refresh model, the new Escape leans into the car aesthetic while simultaneously looking a bit tougher, offering a distinctive new “coast-to-coast” LED light across its snout, as well as revised tail lamps. In addition to revamping the trim structure, Ford’s also added a new ST-Line option, which gives the Escape a sportier flair—chiefly in the form of a blacked-out grille, body-colour trim, red interior trim, and a revised suspension tune. All Escapes also get a mild interior refresh.

Our range-topping 2023 Escape ST-Line Elite AWD sports the optional redesigned 2.0-liter turbocharged I-4, which puts out the same 250 hp and 280 lb-ft of torque and nets the same 23/31/26 mpg city/highway/combined as the previous version of this engine did. The base engine—also redesigned—remains a 1.5-liter turbocharged I-3 with 180 hp; a 192-hp Escape Hybrid and 210-hp Escape Plug-In Hybrid are also available. The non-hybrid models share an eight-speed auto, and the hybrids get a CVT.