STUDY · 2014
Ford F-150 2014 Fatality Profile
Statistical research from AutoIndex24.
Background
The 2014 Ford F-150 fatality profile in this dataset covers 244 fatal crashes and 314 occupant fatalities, based on a snapshot dated 2026-05-02. The figures describe crash characteristics tied to fatal events rather than broader ownership experience, complaint activity, or repair history.
Within those 244 fatal crashes, the dataset identifies several recurring conditions: 128 single-vehicle crashes, 38 alcohol-involved crashes, 29 rollover crashes, and 6 fire-related crashes. The listed deaths-per-crash figure is 1.29.
Overall fatality picture
The central finding is straightforward: the 2014 Ford F-150 appears in 244 fatal crashes linked to 314 occupant fatalities. That places the model-year’s fatality profile around a large base of deadly incidents rather than a narrow cluster of rare edge cases.
The dataset also shows that single-vehicle events are a prominent part of the fatal-crash record. Specifically, 128 fatal crashes are marked as single-vehicle, alongside a single-vehicle share of 52.46. Alcohol involvement appears in 38 fatal crashes, with an alcohol share of 15.57.
Crash characteristics
Several crash types stand out in the fatal-crash mix.
| Crash characteristic | Crashes | Share |
|---|---|---|
| Single-vehicle | 128 | 52.46 |
| Alcohol-involved | 38 | 15.57 |
| Rollover | 29 | 12.02 |
| Fire | 6 | 2.55 |
Single-vehicle crashes are the most prominent category listed, at 128 and 52.46. Rollover crashes account for 29 and 12.02, while fire-related fatal crashes are much less common at 6 and 2.55. Alcohol-involved crashes, at 38 and 15.57, sit between those extremes.
Severity outcomes
The severity side of the profile is captured most directly by the 314 occupant fatalities recorded across 244 fatal crashes. The dataset also includes a deaths-per-crash figure of 1.29, indicating that fatal events were not limited to only one death in every case.
That matters because it shifts the narrative away from isolated fatal incidents and toward a pattern in which some crashes produced multiple occupant deaths. The available data do not break those fatalities down further by roadway type, speed environment, seating position, or restraint use.
What this suggests
The strongest signal in the findings is the prominence of single-vehicle fatal crashes. With 128 such crashes and a listed share of 52.46, this is the clearest crash pattern in the file. Rollover is also notable, with 29 fatal crashes and 12.02, though it remains well below the single-vehicle count.
Alcohol involvement is another visible factor, appearing in 38 fatal crashes and 15.57. Fire appears in 6 fatal crashes and 2.55, making it a present but comparatively limited feature of the overall fatality profile.
Limitations
This is a descriptive fatality snapshot for the 2014 Ford F-150, not a defect finding and not a measure of risk per vehicle on the road. The dataset does not include exposure data, miles traveled, vehicle population, crash locations, occupant ages, or comparisons with other model years.
It also does not say whether rollover, fire, alcohol involvement, and single-vehicle status overlap within the same crashes. As a result, the figures should be read as separate descriptive markers within the 244 fatal crashes recorded as of 2026-05-02.
Frequently asked questions
Q: How many fatal crashes are listed for the 2014 Ford F-150? A: The dataset lists 244 fatal crashes.
Q: How many occupant fatalities are recorded? A: The findings report 314 occupant fatalities.
Q: How common were single-vehicle fatal crashes? A: The dataset shows 128 single-vehicle fatal crashes, with a listed share of 52.46.
Q: How often did rollover appear in fatal crashes? A: Rollover appears in 29 fatal crashes, with a listed share of 12.02.
Q: How often was alcohol involved? A: Alcohol involvement is listed in 38 fatal crashes, with a share of 15.57.
Q: Were fire-related fatal crashes common? A: Fire is listed in 6 fatal crashes, with a share of 2.55.
Sources
- NHTSA FARSpublic_domain
How to cite
Alex Whitman (2026). Ford F-150 2014 Fatality Profile. AutoIndex24 Research. https://auto-index24.com/studies/ford-f-150-2014-fatality-profile