The Ford Bronco is one of the most popular vehicles to wrap right now, and one of the trickier ones to do right. The boxy body panels, exposed door hinges, removable roof options, and black plastic cladding all add complexity a standard SUV does not have. A full professional wrap runs $3,200 to $5,800 depending on trim, film, and whether you include the cladding or top.
- Quick summary
- Cost by trim level
- Film type pricing
- Cladding and roof
- DIY vs professional
- How to save
- FAQ
Cost by trim level
For wrapping purposes the main split is 2-door vs 4-door. The Sasquatch package adds more cladding surface area regardless of trim.
| Bronco variant | Wrap cost range | Film needed |
|---|---|---|
| 2-Door Base / Big Bend | $3,200 to $4,200 | 70 to 80 sq ft |
| 4-Door Outer Banks / Badlands | $3,600 to $4,800 | 80 to 90 sq ft |
| 4-Door Wildtrak / Raptor | $4,000 to $5,800 | 85 to 95 sq ft |
The 4-door has more surface area on the rear doors, larger quarter panels, and a longer roofline. If you want the Hardtop wrapped too, add $300 to $600 to the numbers above.
Film type pricing
| Film type | Material cost | Installed cost |
|---|---|---|
| Budget (TeckWrap, VViViD) | $350 to $500 | $3,200 to $3,800 |
| Mid-tier (Avery SW900, 3M 1080) | $500 to $750 | $3,600 to $4,600 |
| Premium (KPMF, Avery ColorFlow) | $750 to $1,200 | $4,500 to $5,800 |
The Bronco takes trail abuse. Budget films lift at edges when exposed to dust, heat, and the flex stress from off-road driving. Mid-tier or premium film is worth the extra cost on a vehicle that actually goes off-road.
Cladding and roof
The Bronco has a lot of black plastic — fender flares, rocker panels, door trim. Most owners leave it black. If you want it wrapped to match the body, that adds $400 to $700 and requires careful edge work on the textured surface.
A removable Hardtop or Modular Top adds time because a good installer will take it off, wrap it separately, and reinstall. Budget $300 to $600 for top coverage. If you have a Soft Top, it cannot be wrapped. Only the painted metal body panels apply.
DIY vs professional
The boxy angles are actually easier than complex curves, but the A-pillar wraps, door jambs, and exposed front door hinges are where beginners get stuck. These require relief cuts and careful tucking.
DIY material cost runs $400 to $900. Buy at least 15% more than your calculated square footage. Professional installation is the better call if you plan to resell the vehicle — a poor DIY wrap damages paint at edges during removal.
How to save on a Bronco wrap
A partial wrap covering just the hood, roof, and fenders in a contrasting color runs $800 to $1,800 and creates a strong two-tone look without the full vehicle price. Skipping the cladding wrap and sticking with a standard matte or satin finish instead of a colorshift film saves another $500 to $1,500.
Get quotes from three shops and ask specifically what is included — hardtop, jambs, and cladding. Shops that leave those out of the base price often add them back as line items once the job starts.
FAQ
A full wrap on a Ford Bronco costs $3,200 to $5,800 in 2026. The 2-door is at the low end around $3,200 to $4,200. A 4-door Raptor with hardtop coverage can reach $5,800.
Only if you want a fully uniform color. It adds $400 to $700. If your wrap works with the factory black trim, leaving it alone saves money and usually looks cleaner.
Matte black, satin military green, and flat olive drab. Two-tone partials with a dark hood over a lighter body color are also popular on the Bronco platform.
No. Vinyl wrap only sticks to rigid painted surfaces. The fabric soft top cannot be wrapped.
5 to 7 years with Avery or 3M film. Regular off-road use will show wear on edges and lower panels sooner. Rinse the vehicle after dusty runs to keep the film clean.
Written by Chad Reynolds. Chad has covered automotive customization and vinyl wrap pricing for VinylWrapCalculator.com since 2023.
