Aston Martin Vantage vs Ford Mustang

What's the difference?

VS
Aston Martin Vantage
Aston Martin Vantage

2024 price

Ford Mustang
Ford Mustang

$57,490 - $154,990

2025 price

Summary

2024 Aston Martin Vantage
2025 Ford Mustang
Safety Rating

Engine Type
Twin Turbo V8, 4.0L

V8, 5.0L
Fuel Type
Premium Unleaded Petrol

Premium Unleaded Petrol
Fuel Efficiency
12.1L/100km (combined)

13.6L/100km (combined)
Seating
2

4
Dislikes
  • Excitement dulls on public roads
  • Split personality risks alienating the track-obsessed
  • Significantly more expensive

  • Hefty price increase over old model
  • Feels like an update, rather than new-gen 
  • Hyper-active safety systems
2024 Aston Martin Vantage Summary

Aston Martin says the 2024 Vantage is designed to put the brand back where it belongs. And by that, it means thrust into the same conversation as Ferrari and Lamborghini when it comes to the ultimate in driver-focused supercars.

Which is why everything – and I mean everything – about this new model has been tightened, tuned or turned way the hell up in pursuit of performance.

Really, it has been a no-stone-left-unturned approach here. And the result, the brand reckons, is a car that delivers not just more power and more torque, but a near-telepathic connection between car and driver, too.

Well, that’s the promise anyway.

So how does the Vantage stack up in the battle for supercar supremacy? I was quite looking forward to figuring that out, to be honest.

 

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2025 Ford Mustang Summary

The new Ford Mustang GT was not designed for Paris.

Fighting through the morning peak hour rush (which seems to extend through the middle of the day and the afternoon), the new Mustang feels like a caged animal. Which is appropriate, given the car’s namesake is a wild horse that exists to roam the American wilderness.

But once we finally break the shackles of Parasian traffic we find ourselves getting to let this Mustang gallop across the French countryside and unleash its full potential. But more on that later…

The reason we're driving the Mustang in France is because the American brand wanted to connect it to its new racing program at the famous Le Mans sports car race (you know, the one in the Matt Damon movie, Ford v Ferrari).

No less than Bill Ford, great-grandson of the company’s famous founder, was on-hand to see the Mustang at Le Mans, such is the passion for performance.

Ford (the man, not the company) took the opportunity to declare that the Blue Oval brand is not only committed to internal combustion engines for the foreseeable future, but it will retain the V8 under the bonnet of the Mustang GT for as long as it can legally do so.

Australians will have to wait a few more weeks (maybe months) before the seventh-generation Mustang arrives, but here’s what you can expect when it lands on local roads.

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Deep dive comparison

2024 Aston Martin Vantage 2025 Ford Mustang

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