Ford Motor Company has filed to trademark “Mach 4” with the Intellectual Property Office New Zealand (IPONZ), Ford Authority has learned.
Filed on February 25th, 2025, under serial number 1286084, this application contain the goods and services description of “motor vehicles, namely gasoline and electric automobiles, pick-up trucks, sport utility vehicles and their structural parts.”
The Ford Authority Take
As Ford Authority reported back in February, FoMoCo recently filed to trademark “Mach 4” with the United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO). This filing was particularly notable given the fact that Mach 4 could wind up being the name used on the long-rumored four-door version of the Ford Mustang, which is a concept that has existed since the pony car debuted decades ago, and yet, has only intensified as of late. Now, that same trademark filing has surfaced in the country of New Zealand, too – in addition to its neighbor, Australia.
Rumors of a four-door Ford Mustang have swirled for many years to this point, and in fact, that very concept dates back to a time when the first example of the original, first-generation pony car had even been sold. Back in the fall of 2018, word got out that The Blue Oval was thinking about building a four-door Ford Mustang sedan, and about a month later, Ford reportedly showed such a concept to dealers. Then, in June 2020, a report surfaced claiming that a four-door Mustang was indeed “on the table,” but it was a few years before that rumor intensified.
Then, in May 2024, Ford CEO Jim Farley himself said that he “believes” the automaker could make a four-door Mustang, so long as it has “all the performance and attitude of the original.” A few months later, in August, Ford reportedly showed a number of renderings, mockups, and photos of some future Ford Mustang variants, which included a four-door coupe reportedly called the Mach 4, as well as a lifted, off-road, Baja-style model with rugged tires, an RTR-modified Mustang EcoBoost with a $40k price tag, and a high-performance, V8-powered convertible that looked a lot like the older Shelby GT350/GT500 variants, albeit, sans any Shelby badging. Just this past January, Executive Chairman Bill Ford didn’t rule out a four-door Mustang, either.
As Ford Authority exclusively reported last September, Ford actually created a design study of a four-door Mustang sedan based on the S197 generation model some time ago. The automaker even went so far as to create a full-scale model of this Mustang sedan around 2005, though unfortunately, photos of that model are unavailable, and like all design studies, this was an internal concept that was never shown to the public. Obviously, that model never came to fruition, though now, the reality of a Ford Mustang sedan seems to be as strong a possibility as it ever has been, given the appearance of this new trademark filing.
Comments
“We don’t make commodity products.” Jim Farley.
Then he tries really hard to turn the Mustang into a commodity product. Can’t make this up. Every iconic nameplate Ford has done this to has been killed off in their history. Someone on the last post mentioned Thunderbird and that’s exactly what the Mustang is about to be.
I hope they do not call it Mustang, Crown Victoria is what we want, Sedan, Wagon, Police Interseptor, etc., could have done ten years ago.
Bring back the Fusion as a sports sedan.
Mach is EV only. Perhaps a 4 door EV.
As long as the coupe V8 is around. All i care about.
That would be like GM producing a four door Corvette. (a dumb idea) Leave the Mustang what it was meant to be a Coupe Mussel Car, just the way it is.
And bring back the Fusion, or rename it call it the Taurus, Torino, Mondeo, Capri, Five Hundred,
MC-X (Mich. Central X-press) or the Fusion MC-X Hybrid.
PLEASE, DON’T MESS WITH THE MUSTANG, it’s our Sports Car
Opportunity for Lincoln to have a v-8 LS