2003 FORD F-250

6.0L V8 Power Stroke Diesel4WDAUTOMATICdieselturbo
5-Year Cost of Ownership
$20,041 maintenance + known platform issues
~$4,008/yr · 330¢/mile equivalent · $4,543 maintenance + $12,578 expected platform issues
Compare this engine
vs
6.7L V8 Power Stroke Diesel
vs
7.3L V8 Godzilla
Common Problems & Known Issues

The 2003 F-250 Super Duty is a workhorse split into two worlds: the gasoline engines (5.4L, 6.8L V10, 7.3L diesel) are generally solid, but the 6.0L Power Stroke diesel is a minefield of expensive failures that can bankrupt the unprepared. Choose your engine wisely—it defines your ownership experience completely.

6.0L Power Stroke EGR Cooler Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: white smoke from exhaust, coolant loss with no visible leak, overheating under load, milky oil from coolant contamination
Fix: EGR cooler cracks internally, dumping coolant into exhaust and oil. Requires cab removal or in-frame workaround (8-14 hours), plus new cooler, gaskets, oil/coolant flush. Many delete the EGR entirely where legal. Often triggers head gasket failure if not caught early.
Estimated cost: $2,500-4,500

6.0L Power Stroke Head Gasket and Head Bolt Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 90,000-180,000 mi
Symptoms: coolant in oil or oil in coolant, white exhaust smoke, loss of power, overheating, rough idle when cold
Fix: Factory TTY head bolts stretch and fail, blowing head gaskets. Requires heads off, decking, ARP stud kit installation (18-24 hours). Often combined with EGR delete and oil cooler bulletproofing. This is THE signature 6.0L failure.
Estimated cost: $4,000-7,000

6.0L Power Stroke Oil Cooler Failure

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 70,000-130,000 mi
Symptoms: coolant in oil (coffee-colored dipstick), rapid coolant loss, oil in coolant reservoir, overheating, white smoke
Fix: Oil cooler core fails internally, mixing oil and coolant. Requires cooler replacement, flush of both systems, often reveals other cooling system damage (10-14 hours). 'Bulletproof' kits with upgraded coolers popular preventive measure.
Estimated cost: $2,000-3,500

6.0L Power Stroke High-Pressure Oil System (HPOP and Injector) Leaks

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000-200,000 mi
Symptoms: hard starting when cold, extended cranking, rough idle, oil weeping from injector area, loss of power under load
Fix: Injector O-rings and high-pressure oil pump seals leak, losing the 500+ PSI needed for injection. Injector O-rings are 6-8 hours; full HPOP replacement is 10-14 hours. Stand-pipe and dummy plugs also common leak points.
Estimated cost: $1,500-4,000

5.4L Triton Spark Plug Ejection (2-Valve)

Occasional · medium severity
Typical onset: 60,000-120,000 mi
Symptoms: sudden misfire, loud popping or hissing from engine, check engine light, loss of power, rough idle
Fix: Shallow spark plug threads in aluminum heads strip out, ejecting plug. Requires HeliCoil or TimeSert thread repair per cylinder (1-2 hours each). Some engines lose multiple plugs over time. Preventive: never over-torque plugs, use anti-seize.
Estimated cost: $300-800 per cylinder

4R100 Transmission Oil Cooler Line Corrosion

Common · medium severity
Typical onset: 100,000+ mi
Symptoms: transmission fluid leak at radiator, red fluid puddle under truck, low trans fluid warnings, slipping when hot
Fix: Steel cooler lines rust through where they enter radiator, especially in salt states. Replace lines and flush system (2-4 hours). Check radiator for internal trans cooler failure—can mix coolant and ATF, destroying transmission.
Estimated cost: $400-900

Ball Joint Wear (Front Axle)

Common · high severity
Typical onset: 80,000-150,000 mi
Symptoms: clunking over bumps, steering wander, uneven tire wear, loose steering feel, play in wheel when jacked up
Fix: Heavy-duty use wears upper and lower ball joints. Failure can separate suspension—dangerous. Replace in pairs per side with quality parts (4-6 hours for uppers and lowers). Many upgrade to aftermarket heavy-duty units.
Estimated cost: $800-1,500

Cab Corner and Rocker Panel Rust (Northern Climates)

Common · low severity
Symptoms: bubbling paint at cab corners, rust perforation behind rear wheels, rocker panel rot, floor pan rust in severe cases
Fix: Road salt eats cab corners and rockers from inside out. Cosmetic until structural. Repair requires cutting and welding new metal (6-12 hours). Preventive undercoating helps but check before buying—expensive to fix right.
Estimated cost: $1,500-4,000 for both sides
Owner tips
  • If buying a 6.0L diesel, budget $5,000-8,000 for 'bulletproofing' (EGR delete, oil cooler, head studs) or buy one already done—it's not 'if' but 'when' these fail.
  • 7.3L Power Stroke (available early 2003) is the goldilocks diesel—slower but bulletproof. Avoid 6.0L unless heavily discounted and you can wrench.
  • 5.4L and 6.8L V10 gas engines are far more reliable but thirsty. V10 is nearly unstoppable for towing if you can afford fuel.
  • Check frame for cracks near rear spring hangers and steering box mounts—common on plow trucks and heavy haulers.
  • Inspect ball joints annually on 4WD models—failure is catastrophic and common.
  • Transmission cooler line condition matters: if rusty, replace before they blow on the highway.
Buy a 7.3L diesel or gas model without hesitation; buy a 6.0L diesel only if bulletproofed or you're a masochist with a lift and toolbox.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.
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