All 1000 examples of the Ford Mustang Dark Horse destined for Australia later this year have been allocated to dealers and declared as ‘sold out’ – unless any existing deals fall over and allow someone else to take the spot in the queue.

“Ford Australia has today announced specification and pricing updates to the seventh-generation Ford Mustang, and confirmed
that Mustang Dark Horse Special Edition will depart Ford Australia’s stable for 2025, with all 1000 Australia-bound (examples) finding homes,” a statement from the company said.

In announcing the initial Dark Horse was done for Australia, Ford also discreetly crept up the price for the rest of the 2025 Ford Mustang range by up to $2000 following stronger than expected customer demand.

For example, the starting price for the turbo four-cylinder Mustang Coupe has risen by $2000 from $64,990 to $66,990 plus on-road costs.

And the cheapest V8 model has risen by $1988 – from $77,002 to $78,990 plus on-road costs.

Although the Ford Mustang Dark Horse has bolted for now, the company has released a new optional ‘Bronze’ appearance package.

The ‘Bronze’ pack replaces the previous ‘Black’ pack and includes:

  • Bronze Pony grille badge
  • Bronze ‘GT’ badge on the tail
  • Bronze ‘5.0’ badging on the front fenders
  • 19-in x 9-in front and 19-in x 9.5-in rear Bronze-painted wheels

2025 Ford Mustang Australian pricing

  • Mustang EcoBoost Coupe four-cylinder automatic – $66,990
  • Mustang GT Coupe V8 manual – $78,990
  • Mustang GT Coupe V8 automatic – $81,990
  • Mustang GT Convertible V8 automatic – $87,667
  • Mustang Dark Horse Coupe V8 manual – $99,102
  • Mustang Dark Horse Coupe V8 automatic – $103,002
  • Bronze appearance package – $1500 (4-cyl), $1950 (V8)
  • Magnetically controlled suspension, red brake calipers – $2950 (4-cyl), $3835 (V8)
  • Recaro seats – $2950 (4-cyl), $3835 (V8)
  • Premium paint – $700 (4-cyl), $910 (V8)

Above prices exclude on-road costs such as registration, stamp duty and any arbitrary dealer charges.