RE: Ford Puma ST | PH Used Buying Guide

RE: Ford Puma ST | PH Used Buying Guide

Saturday 18th May

Ford Puma ST | PH Used Buying Guide

The Puma ST couldn't quite live up to the Fiesta - but the older manual was much better than you might think...


Key considerations

  • Available for £18,000
  • 1.5-litre three-cylinder petrol turbo, front-wheel drive
  • First Euro Ford SUV to wear the ST badge
  • Well worthy of that badge on both handling and performance
  • Quite a few niggly issues but none of them major
  • ’24 ST refresh replaced the 1.5 engine with a 1.0

Guess what was the best-selling car in the UK in 2023, and is more than likely going to top the sales charts again in 2024? You may or may not be surprised to learn that it is the Ford Puma. It won’t be that surprising to those who realise that it’s basically a small SUV version of the Fiesta, which for a long time was the go-to Goldilocks vehicle for those who wanted everyday motoring with an extra sparkle of fun, but it might be confusing to those who associate the Puma name with niche products like the 500-off Racing Puma. 

Anyway, the Fiesta was pensioned off in 2023 by which time the Puma had properly taken over from it as Britain’s favourite car. To broaden its appeal Ford waved the ST wand over it, resulting in September 2020 in the car we’re looking at now in this buying guide. The Puma ST was the first European-market Ford SUV to get the popular ST performance makeover.

We’re restricting our enquiries here to the 2020-24 ST 1.5 which was ‘refreshed’ in the early part of 2024. When we say ‘refreshed’ we mean that the 1.5 engine was binned, leaving the 168hp/183lb ft 48v mild hybrid version of the 1.0 triple as the default ST powertrain and the Focus as the only all-petrol car in the Ford range. 

At 7.4 seconds the 1.0 hybrid ST’s 0-62mph time was slower than the old 1.5’s and the only transmission you could get with it was the 7-speed dual-clutch auto, the 6-speed manual box now being restricted to buyers of the entry-model (non-ST) 1.0. Outside, the front end was revised to remind us of the recently departed Fiesta. Inside there was a larger ‘floating’ touchscreen running the latest Sync 4 infotainment system and, as per the regrettable industry trend, no more physical knobs to control the climate. 

Anyway, as stated a minute ago we’re not looking at that one. We’ll be sticking with the full-fat all-petrol no-hybrid 1.5 which was available to order from October 2020. Ford did also build a limited-run Gold Edition, which was voted into existence in mid-2021 by 275,000 Ford fans on social meeja. What they apparently wanted was black paint with a grey racing stripe, gold seat stitching, gold wheels, red brake calipers, carbon cabin trim, a Quaife mechanical limited-slip differential and special badges. That’s exactly what they got. It looked better than it sounded. 350 of the 999 GEs made were sold in the UK.   

Although the ST technically came out in 2020, it was late in the year so you won’t see many (if any) 2020-registered examples for sale. You will see Cat N or S cars for under £15k but the normal basement price for an unrepaired Puma ST is around £18,000. For that money, you’ll be looking at an early example with 30-45,000 miles on it, but there are enough cars on the market to make it easy for you to find later or lower-mileage examples for not much more than that. 


SPECIFICATION | Ford Puma ST 1.5 

Engine: 1,497cc turbo petrol inline three 12v
Transmission: 6-speed manual, front-wheel drive
Power (hp): 197@6,000rpm
Torque (lb ft): 236@2,500-3,500rpm
0-62mph (secs): 6.7
Top speed (mph): 137
Weight (kg): 1,283
MPG (WLTP): 42.8
CO2 (g/km): 148
Wheels (in): 8 x 19
Tyres: 225/40
On sale: 2021 - on
Price new: £28,495
Price now: from £18,000

Note for reference: car weight and power data is hard to pin down with absolute certainty. For consistency, we use the same source for all our guides. We hope the data we use is right more often than it’s wrong. Our advice is to treat it as relative rather than definitive.


ENGINE & GEARBOX

At 1.5 litres the aluminium, variable cam-timed EcoBoost ‘Dragon’ engine powering the Puma ST was one of the biggest three-cylinder engines on the market, but it was still one of the smallest engines to find itself in a performance-oriented car. It was essentially the same as the Fiesta ST’s but with a new air intake and roll-suppressing engine mounts. The Puma’s 197hp power output was the same as the Fiesta’s but its peak torque figure of 236lb ft was higher and delivered from a typically low point (for a three-cylinder car) of 2,500rpm. 

You either liked the three-pot rumble or you didn’t. There was a graininess about the Ford 1.5 at low revs but like most triples it felt unburstable, serving up linear power from not much above idle to over 6,000rpm and chucking in the odd pop and bang on the overrun. The Performance Pack was an attractive option at £950 as it contained not only the Quaife diff (operating in conjunction with brake-powered torque vectoring) but also electronic launch control and shift lights. 

Some Dragon engines have been afflicted with a random stuttering under load, with no warning lights showing. Various possible causes have been touted for this including contaminated fuel, a faulty cam position sensor or duff spark plugs, which according to Ford are supposed to be changed every two years (it’s every three for the Focus ST). 

The one-cylinder cutoff system allowed you to get something like the WLTP fuel consumption figure of nearly 43mpg on a run, but that could easily drop to the high 30s in spirited use, giving a potential real-world range of 300 miles from the 45-litre fuel tank even if you were caning it. That was something you could easily find yourself doing. Although the stick for the six-speed manual gearbox (transplanted unchanged from the Fiesta ST) could seem like it was positioned a bit too low and maybe not for’ard enough, its short-throw action gave you plenty of encouragement to work the drivetrain. The odd owner found that they needed to exercise some care selecting first or third if they wanted to avoid graunching. One owner took his car back to the dealer when he noticed that the gearstick wasn’t returning to the neutral position of its own accord. The mechanic greased the linkages and the problem went away. Some Puma MHEV 155s have suffered from second gear failure or jumping out of first but we’re not aware of any particular issues with the ST box. 

There was a recall to replace right-hand engine oil separators that may have been damaged prior to engine assembly but we’re not sure which model of Puma that was for. There have been many recorded issues with the original 12v Rombat batteries reading 12v when the engine was running (which is low) and going into ‘deep sleep’ power-saving mode to preserve their charge. Once the sleep message came up owners might find that their passenger side doors wouldn’t open keylessly and/or the foot-wave method of opening the boot didn’t work. 

There might also be issues with the stop-start mech and sometimes there would be a total power-down. At least one owner was told by their dealer that they weren’t driving the car far enough to keep the battery charged although there was no evidence to back that up and in one case the dealership had to apologise for making that assertion. Replacing the battery with a Varta item and updating the software didn’t necessarily fix the problem. There’ll be more on this later in the story. Breakdown recovery guys discovered that disconnecting and then reconnecting the battery would get owners mobile again, and were advising them to carry a 10mm ring spanner for that purpose. 

Service intervals for an ST are every year or 12,500 miles. Typical Ford dealer prices for the year one and year two services are around £220 and £370 respectively. An independent like PumaSpeed in Wakefield will do you a minor service for £100 or the major service (oil and filter, air filter, spark plugs, pollen filter, oil sump plug, diagnostic check and report on Puma ST specific problem areas) for £239. As the name suggests PumaSpeed can also tune your ST to 255hp (from £549), 275hp (from £2,299) or 315hp (X47 hybrid turbo, from £3,249). Ford’s ‘preferred’ tuner Mountune offer a SMARTflash M260 upgrade (intercooler, induction and charge pipework, throttle body, remap) that costs £717. 

It pays to check the status of a used ST you’re thinking of buying because a lot of the earlier cars with the standard three-year/60,000-mile warranty will be running out of cover in 2024. That basic warranty was extendable (for around £250 a year) to five-years/100,000-miles, which put the Ford nearer to Korean rivals like the Kona or Stonic. Puma ST road tax, or VED as it’s called these days, is £180 a year. The insurance group for one of these – 22 – is lower than the Fiesta ST’s.

CHASSIS

The Puma ST was always going to be compared to the Fiesta ST and, as you would expect given that it was an SUV rather than a small hatch, it was always going to suffer in that comparison. But it was a harsh comparison because the Fiesta ST was one of the best driving small cars you could buy. Ford tried hard to get the Puma ST as dynamically close to the Fiesta as possible, lowering its ride height by 21mm, fitting Michelin’s Pilot Sport 4S tyres on larger 19-inch wheels and keeping the weight difference down to either 50kg or 10kg, depending on which corner of the internet you were in. 

There’s no pleasing some folk though. Some found the Puma ST’s 25 per cent faster steering to be almost too responsive. Combined with the new twin-tube dampers, stiffer ‘force vectoring’ directionally-wound springs and anti-roll bar which increased the stiffness of the rear axle by 40 per cent over the Fiesta ST and 50 per cent over the standard Puma, the handling could seem borderline unforgiving if you were coming into the Puma ST from a less responsive car. Some testers reckoned it was unnecessarily twitchy and that you’d be better off with the 153hp ST Line model. The smart ones simply got on with enjoying the fast turn-in, rotatability and balance, all of which were top-notch not just by SUV standards but also by the standards of any good-handling small car. 

The best approach was to think of the Puma ST as an SUV first and an ST second. That way you weren’t unfairly comparing it to an all-time handling great. Unrealistic expectations were stripped away and you could start having fun on an appropriate level. It was hard to get into real trouble in a Puma ST especially with the reassurance of brakes that, at 325mm front and 271mm rear, were 17 per cent bigger than the regular Puma’s.  

All Pumas had automatic emergency braking with pedestrian detection, lane-keep assist and traffic sign recognition. A £650 Driver Assistance pack came with blind-spot monitoring, cross-traffic alert and evasive steering assist which used radar and a camera to detect slower-moving (or stopped) vehicles ahead. According to the early configurators the DA pack was also supposed to include adaptive cruise but in reality the cars with that box ticked didn’t have it. Owners who brought this up with dealers were given refunds for the mis-sell and the configurator was changed. 

Creaking or a ‘ching’ noise when applying steering lock has been noticed on some STs. At least one owner was told that they needed new steering rack bolts. We couldn’t find any evidence of a recall or tech bulletin on this. If you can’t find the right used Performance Pack car with the Quaife LSD there are outfits who will retrofit one to a non-Quaifed ST for around £1,350. 

BODYWORK

Mean Green was a popular colour for these Puma STs. Contrast black roofs looked good with any main colour. A panoramic roof was an option but judging by the rarity of them on the used market not many new buyers ticked that box. 

Some cars have needed new door modules and trim pieces have been known to come away slightly from the doors. Condensation has affected some rear light lenses but that’s happened to some Kugas too. The ST had Ford’s excellent quick-clear windscreen but some owners complained about excessive ‘glare and flare’ from the elements. Washer jet pipes could get partially detached, reducing the flow to one side. Windows could ‘bounce’ down once they’d reached the top of their travel. Fully opening the window and then holding the switch down for four seconds, and then repeating the procedure with the window closed, would usually reset the mechanism. 

The twitchiness that we mentioned in the previous section could bring on car-sickness, although the big windows in the back did mitigate against that a little.

INTERIOR 

Being an upper trim variant the ST had wireless device charging along with its Sync3 8-inch screen infotainment system. Updates for the Sync3 don’t appear to have worked with creamy smoothness and sometimes the system wouldn’t load the media player at all. However, the sat nav was good and the voice control worked pretty well too. Smartphones of both the Apple and Android varieties were catered for but only with a USB connection. 

Sometimes the backlight for the infotainment screen stayed on after you’d switched everything off, giving rise to theories as to that being one possible cause of the battery drain mentioned earlier. Rear interior lights that refused to go off was another. The FordPass connectivity app that gave you remote locking and starting and car location finding hasn’t been trouble-free either. Software updates didn’t always put those problems right. 

The digital instrumentation was sharp and good to view although some owners have experienced flickering issues. The ST got a 10-speaker (with subwoofer) 575-watt B&O audio system instead of the basic Puma’s 7-speaker setup but there wasn’t much else to rave about in the cabin, other than the presence of physical control knobs that were about to disappear in the ’24 refresh but of course you wouldn’t have known that at the time.  

The front Recaros were well bolstered and not punishingly firm. Legroom could seem a bit tight for tall adults seated in the second row but the headroom was OK back there and as a bonus for non-sporting passengers the Puma ST was 1 decibel quieter inside than the Fiesta ST. The use of leather for the steering wheel and gear lever and the faux-suede seat coverings took the ambience level just high enough for it not to feel cheap. 

The 456-litre boot had a drainable 80-litre ‘MegaBox’ under the floor, a typically thoughtful family-friendly Ford feature that you could use to take stinky stuff to the tip without having to worry about it. Clipping the boot floor to the back of the seats allowed you to stand two golf bags up in the recess for their final trip to the tip after one bad round too many. 

There have been issues with disconnecting parcel shelf clips, which allowed the shelf to hang limply from the tailgate. A recall was issued on 300 Pumas built in 2023 to rectify faults with the Restraint Control Module which was meant to warn of incorrect replacement parts installed in the seatbelt pretensioner and airbag systems. Some very early cars were recalled to fix airbag retention springs that might not have been locking the airbag to the steering. There was another recall on all 2022 Pumas (and Kugas) to fix a fault with the SOS eCALL system, following an earlier one in 2021 to do with the software for that system.

PH VERDICT

Although we’re not sure about the ’24-on 1.0 Puma ST, the 2020-24 1.5 version that we’ve looked at here was more than capable of providing enough ‘ST-ness’ to satisfy a demanding owner. It could put plenty of fun the driver’s way without putting the driver in harm’s way. 

Obviously it would be foolish to expect a vehicle of this size, SUV or otherwise, to deliver huge amounts of interior space or mega towing abilities, but it was entirely reasonable to expect the ST to fulfil the more mundane needs of most average families with a bubbly side order of solo driving pleasure. And that’s what it did. If you fell asleep driving an ST you weren’t driving it right.

When it was being driven right it made demands on the bod behind the wheel, like constant concentration, but the rewards were worth it. The front end was super-darty, but given a choice between that and porridge-slow which would you pick? Hyundai’s Kona N had quite a bit more power at 276hp but its gearbox was an auto and the chassis wasn’t as much fun as the Ford’s. Nor was the Volkswagen T-Roc R’s, although the VW’s infotainment system was more on point than the Puma’s.  

The ST has a record for reliability that could be described as reasonable but far from stellar. Most of the issues seemed to be niggly rather than apocalyptic, although you’d think there’d be more evidence of action from Ford on the steering rack bolts thing. By and large, owners seemed more than prepared to accept the ‘because Ford’ flaws and glitches in exchange for the driving purity which is the upside of a modern Ford, especially those wearing an ST badge. 

The most affordable ST on PH Classifieds was this 2021 45,000-miler in white at £18,149. For a thousand or so more quids you could knock off a chunk of that mileage with this example in Ram Raid Red.  New, you could get an ST with the desirable £950 Performance Pack for under £30k. The cheapest used PP car we found at the time of writing in May 2024 was a 21-registered car in white and just under 19,000 miles on the clock, going for £20,450. The most affordable Performance Pack car on PH Classifieds was this  8,000-mile 2022 car in blue with a pano roof at £23,499. 

If you like the idea of being recognised in the street by up to 275,000 people you might want to consider snaffling this 24,000-mile Gold Edition. The sticker price was £21,399, though you might want to budget a little more than that to replace the Royal Explorer front tyres. The priciest ST on PH was this one at £27k on the nose. 


See every Puma ST for sale

Author
Discussion

Firebobby

Original Poster:

568 posts

41 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
30-40k miles. Just getting ready for a £1k timing/oil pump belt change! Either that or wake up in a cold sweat every night wondering if it'll get you work next day without blitzing itself. Not for me thanks.

GreatScott2016

1,244 posts

90 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
I have no experience of these, but the looks have grown on me. There is a grey one in the village that looks particularly nice. Wasn’t aware of the niggles, but probably good fun behind the wheel smile

Baddie

643 posts

219 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
I thought the 3 cyl eco boost was acquiring a chocolate reputation, but no mention of that here, unless alluded to above re timing belt/oil pump.

Regardless, not for me.

Nyloc20

608 posts

65 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
I thought the timing belt issues related to the earlier engines. Our 70 plate ST Line Fiesta is a brilliant little car, 31k with no issues and it’s not had an easy life. I like the Puma ST, we’ll probably trade our Fiesta and Focus ST3 for one next year now we can manage with one daily driver between us.

HazzaT

485 posts

47 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
Baddie said:
I thought the 3 cyl eco boost was acquiring a chocolate reputation, but no mention of that here, unless alluded to above re timing belt/oil pump.

Regardless, not for me.
There are a few diffent 3 cylinder ecoboosts, even just the 1.5 has gone through a few different revisions over the years

Jon_S_Rally

3,452 posts

90 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
EcoBoost engines are fine. There must be millions of them out there by now. All cars/engines have some issues. As someone said above, they've been through numerous iterations, but are still being labelled as "EcoBoom" because of a water pipe issue that was solved years ago.

Even the wet belt thing wouldn't bother me to be honest. It's quite commonplace now. Just stick to the recommended service interval and it will be fine in most cases.

nismo48

3,832 posts

209 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
EcoBoost engines are fine. There must be millions of them out there by now. All cars/engines have some issues. As someone said above, they've been through numerous iterations, but are still being labelled as "EcoBoom" because of a water pipe issue that was solved years ago.

Even the wet belt thing wouldn't bother me to be honest. It's quite commonplace now. Just stick to the recommended service interval and it will be fine in most cases.
+1

s m

23,306 posts

205 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
It would be good to see a head to head test, with some track times included, to see the difference between the old Racing Puma with LSD and the more powerful ST GE with LSD. See if it could uphold the old timer’s reputation against stuff like the 306 GTi-6 and Integra DC2 as per that old test

Firebobby

Original Poster:

568 posts

41 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
Jon_S_Rally said:
EcoBoost engines are fine. There must be millions of them out there by now. All cars/engines have some issues. As someone said above, they've been through numerous iterations, but are still being labelled as "EcoBoom" because of a water pipe issue that was solved years ago.

Even the wet belt thing wouldn't bother me to be honest. It's quite commonplace now. Just stick to the recommended service interval and it will be fine in most cases.
The problem is even with regular service intervals followed, the belts deteriorate and fibres contaminate the oil and no amount of oil and filter changes will help because the oil pickup is downstream of the filter and it's that, that gets blocked. I readily agree that there are millions of eco boost engines and no doubt only a very small proportion will be involved in any issues. But, would you rest easy wondering if yours is one of them??biggrin

CG2020UK

1,611 posts

42 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
I’ve never driven one but I have a real soft spot for a Puma ST.

Really good value car in the current climate that can do family duties but give the owner a good laugh.

We actually went to buy a lightly used one before our 330e but it turned out it had been listed wrong and was just an ST Line unfortunately.

Mr Tidy

22,698 posts

129 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
Firebobby said:
The problem is even with regular service intervals followed, the belts deteriorate and fibres contaminate the oil and no amount of oil and filter changes will help because the oil pickup is downstream of the filter and it's that, that gets blocked. I readily agree that there are millions of eco boost engines and no doubt only a very small proportion will be involved in any issues. But, would you rest easy wondering if yours is one of them??biggrin
That makes sense, and what's with the annual/12.5K mile service intervals?

My old 3 Series only needs a service every other year or 18K miles and has a cam-chain!

It really doesn't seem like progress to me. banghead

I'd happily drive a Fiesta, but by comparison the Puma is a minger.

Hugo Stiglitz

37,299 posts

213 months

Sunday 19th May
quotequote all
The engine doesn't bother me, its the look of Fat Boy Slim's album cover bodywork that bothers.

Jon_S_Rally

3,452 posts

90 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Firebobby said:
The problem is even with regular service intervals followed, the belts deteriorate and fibres contaminate the oil and no amount of oil and filter changes will help because the oil pickup is downstream of the filter and it's that, that gets blocked. I readily agree that there are millions of eco boost engines and no doubt only a very small proportion will be involved in any issues. But, would you rest easy wondering if yours is one of them??biggrin
No less easy than with any other car. Like I said, they all have their issues.

My current daily is a Peugeot 208, which has a wet belt engine and I sleep fine.

Trevor555

4,466 posts

86 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Drove my wifes one over the weekend.

Everytime I drive it I'm still impressed at how well it drives for a relatively cheap car (26.3k new during Covid)

Zero problems until now (3 years old)

Just had the steering column replaced under warranty. TSB issued on them.

We normaly change her car at 3 years old, but can't find anything better for sub 40k

Been so impressed with the Ford dealer we've ordered a new Mustang for the weekend toy.

stevemcs

8,718 posts

95 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Firebobby said:
30-40k miles. Just getting ready for a £1k timing/oil pump belt change! Either that or wake up in a cold sweat every night wondering if it'll get you work next day without blitzing itself. Not for me thanks.
Not on a 1.5

CacheMonet

108 posts

88 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
My Mk8 ST made a huge amount of sense on PCP pre-covid, but at these prices and mileages I can't say the engine makes for a wise investment. If you simply must have an SUV, the very small step up in price to a T-Roc R or Formentor seems the better buy.

J4CKO

41,764 posts

202 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
CacheMonet said:
My Mk8 ST made a huge amount of sense on PCP pre-covid, but at these prices and mileages I can't say the engine makes for a wise investment. If you simply must have an SUV, the very small step up in price to a T-Roc R or Formentor seems the better buy.
Not heard of any issues on these engines, it has a normal cam belt not the wet belt.

Even the problematic 1.0 ones with the wet belt, the problems can be mitigated somewhat, by

Changing the oil regularly for the correct grade.

Dont thrash from cold

Dont labour the engine in a high gear

Cool down after hard use, dont just switch it off

Check the Degas pipe recall has been done on earlier ones.

After a given mileage get the oil strainer checked for debris, I have done this recently on my 1.6 ST to fit a baffled sump, its a couple of hours work to remove, clean, check and refit, worth it for piece of mind. My brother did it on his wife's B max as the oil light was staying on longer than he thought appropriate and it was full of fibres, cleaned out, changed the oil and its been fine since.

We have a now ten year old Fiesta, its been fine so far, but its only done 50k or less and has had a fair few oil changes.

A lot of it is poor design but a lot is down to maintenance and rough treatment as well.



WPA

8,993 posts

116 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Never liked the looks of these or the Roland Rat dash / steering wheel.

Sevenman

746 posts

194 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
Is that an SUV?

It just looks like a hatchback to me. if I was told it was a new model of Fiesta I wouldn't be surprised.

But then I don't 'get' SUVs.


Trevor555

4,466 posts

86 months

Monday 20th May
quotequote all
CacheMonet said:
If you simply must have an SUV, the very small step up in price to a T-Roc R or Formentor seems the better buy.
When we bought our ST we also priced up the T-Roc R in a similar spec.

Puma ST £26,300 during covid

T-Roc R was £46,000 with options

And the T-Roc had all plastic door panels!!!