1995 Ford F-250 Lug Nut Torque & Bolt Specs

The 1995 Ford F-250 lug nut torque is 165 ft-lbs (224 Nm), tightened with a 15/16" socket on M14x1.5 studs. Torque in a star pattern in two passes (snug, then final), and re-check after the first 50–100 miles of driving. Use a calibrated torque wrench — not an impact gun — for the final pass.

Lug nut torque: 165 ft-lbs (224 Nm) · Socket size: 15/16" · Thread: M14x1.5.

This page is the OEM-referenced fastener summary for the 1995 Ford F-250. Use it before any maintenance or repair job where torque values matter — brake work, wheel changes, suspension service, engine teardowns, or oil changes. Specs are pulled from manufacturer service literature, cross-checked against community data, and updated as new chassis variants become available.

Ford lug-nut torque varies more by chassis than most makes — 100 ft-lbs for Focus/Fusion/Fiesta, 150 ft-lbs for half-ton F-150, and 165 ft-lbs for Super Duty F-250/F-350. F-150s from 2004-2014 use a 21mm OEM socket, while 2015+ aluminum-body trucks moved to the larger 22mm. Ford torque-to-yield (TTY) head bolts are standard from the early 2000s — do not reuse them, ever.

Common fastener categories on the 1995 Ford F-250

Repair guidance for this model year

Heads up for 1995 Ford F-250 owners: Vehicles this age frequently have seized fasteners due to thread corrosion. Apply penetrating oil (PB Blaster, Kroil) 24 hours before any wrenching, and have a thread chaser on hand. Lug studs are particularly prone to thread damage at this age; if a nut spins on without engaging, the stud is stretched and must be replaced before the wheel goes back on.

Tools you will need

Frequently asked questions

What is the lug nut torque on a 1995 Ford F-250?

The OEM-specified lug-nut torque for the 1995 Ford F-250 is 165 ft-lbs (224 Nm), using a 15/16" socket on M14x1.5 thread studs. Use a calibrated torque wrench in a star pattern, in two passes (50% and 100%), and re-check after 50-100 miles of driving.

What socket size do I need for the 1995 Ford F-250 lug nuts?

The 1995 Ford F-250 uses a 15/16" socket. A 6-point impact-rated socket is recommended over a 12-point chrome socket — 12-points round off lug nuts under impact-driver use.

Are the 1995 Ford F-250 fasteners metric or SAE?

Metric is the standard for this vehicle. Most fasteners on this vehicle are metric (M6, M8, M10, M12, M14). Bring a full metric set; SAE substitutes can round the head. Bolt-head markings are the fastest way to confirm grade and material at the bench.

Other Ford F-250 years

Same model, different model year — fastener spec may change. Always confirm against the year for your VIN.

All 5 1995 Ford F-250 fastener specs

Per-bolt torque, wrench size, and thread spec for the 1995 Ford F-250, sourced from OEM service literature and verified against community shop data. Values pair imperial (ft-lb) and metric (Nm) where the manufacturer publishes both. 1 of the 5 fastener specs on this page are independently verified against OEM service manuals and manufacturer torque data (last reviewed June 2026).

Brakes — 1995 Ford F-250

Brake fasteners on the 1995 Ford F-250 — caliper bracket, slide pins, and banjo bolt torque follow. The brake rotor retaining clip uses a N/A drive on a N/A thread, torqued to Remove and discard at the wheel studs.

Engine — 1995 Ford F-250

Engine bolt-by-bolt torque for the 1995 Ford F-250, including the long block, valve covers, and intake. At the intake to cylinder head, the intake manifold bolt torques to 18-24 ft-lbs (Varies drive, Varies thread). For the oil pan, plan for a 1/2" Socket tool on a M14x1.5 stud; final torque is 20 ft-lbs (27 Nm) (oil drain plug). Confirmed against manufacturer service literature.

Drivetrain — 1995 Ford F-250

Drivetrain and driveline fasteners for the 1995 Ford F-250 — axle, transmission, and differential plugs. For the all four wheels, plan for a 15/16" tool on a M14x1.5 stud; final torque is 165 ft-lbs (224 Nm) (lug nuts).

Suspension — 1995 Ford F-250

Suspension and chassis fastener torque for the 1995 Ford F-250 — strut, control arm, and sway bar values. Wheel lug nut tightens to 165 ft-lbs (224 Nm), takes a 13/16" or 7/8" driver, runs on M14x1.5 threads, located at the wheels.

New to torquing wheels? Read our How lug nut torque works — the complete guide for star-pattern sequence, re-torque intervals, and how to read a lug spec — then use the 1995 Ford F-250 numbers above.

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