How many Ford Falcons were produced?
There isn't a single worldwide production figure for the Ford Falcon because the name was used in separate markets with different lifespans. The two largest and most-documented markets are the United States and Australia, each with its own total. Here's how the numbers are commonly cited for those markets.
Two major markets, two production totals
Note: The figures below are approximate and depend on how models and variants are counted (base Falcons, Futura, Sprint, and wagon variants in the U.S.; all Falcon variants across Australian series).
- United States: Roughly 1.2–1.6 million Falcons were produced in the U.S. from 1960 through the mid-1960s, covering passenger models and variants such as the Ranchero and various coupes and wagons.
These U.S. figures cover only the American-market Falcon family and exclude export-only variants or non-U.S. markets.
- Australia: About 3.0–4.5 million Falcons were produced in Australia between 1960 and 2016 across all series (including sedans, utes, and wagons).
Again, these totals reflect the national production count and do not include export-only Falcons or vehicles rebadged under another name in other regions.
Definitions and caveats
Production totals for the Falcon are sensitive to definitions: whether you count only sedans or all body styles, whether you include export variants or domestic-only models, and how you treat early pre- and post-nameplate versions. Auto historians and corporate archives occasionally publish slightly different tallies depending on these criteria.
Summary
In short, there isn't a single global tally for Ford Falcons. The best-supported figures come from the two major markets: roughly 1.2–1.6 million in the United States and about 3.0–4.5 million in Australia, which together place the combined total in the broad range of roughly 4.2–6.1 million vehicles. Given the long and regionally varied production history, precise totals depend on the scope and definitions used. For exact year-by-year specifics, official Ford archives or national vehicle registries are the most reliable sources.
