Wyoming buys the most F-150s per person. Texas buys the most, period.
Same real data, two honest rankings that barely overlap — because "most per capita" and "most overall" are answering different questions, and the gap between them is mostly just population size.
Top 10
Wyoming is #1 by share — 7.2% of all used-vehicle sales are F-150s, the highest rate anywhere. But Wyoming has only 584,000 people, so that rate translates to a small number of actual trucks. Texas's rate (3.8%) doesn't even crack the per-capita top 15 — but with 30.5 million people behind it, Texas produces an estimated 1.16 million F-150 owners, more than the next three states combined.
The "overall" numbers on this page are estimates (state population × F-150's reported market share), not directly measured sales counts — no source publishes exact per-state unit totals, since that's proprietary registration data. Treat the ranking as a reasonable approximation, not a precise count.
17 states aren't Ford-truck country at all. In grey states, a different vehicle outsold the F-150 — Honda Civic in California, Chevrolet Equinox across much of the Midwest, Toyota Tacoma in the Pacific Northwest. F-150's actual share in those states wasn't reported, so they're excluded from both rankings rather than guessed at.
Vehicle popularity and market share: iSeeCars.com used-vehicle study (1–5 year old vehicles). State populations: U.S. Census Bureau Vintage 2023 estimates. "Estimated total owners" is population × reported share, not a measured figure.