2022 Ford Maverick Tie Down Anchors

Written: February 23, 2022 – Updated: December 30, 2022

The 2022 Ford Maverick requires Ford OE anchors (as of right now). When I first bought the truck, these pictures were of the Curt brand D-ring anchors I found. At the time, neither they nor any other D-ring anchor out there fit.

Ford OEM D-Ring Floor Anchors

Ford now offers the D-ring anchors on their parts site. You can find them here: D-rings (Comes 1 per package) and screws (Comes 4 per package)

Materials

  • Needed: T-Handle Ratcheting Tap Wrench, M8 x 1.25 thread tap, cutting oil, Qty: 2 – Hook Tie Down – Rear, Center – Part #: NZ6Z60550A74A, Qty 1: Screw – Part #: W721941S450B
  • Cost: $105.98 (2 D-rings) + $9.90 (1 pkg screws) + tax = $122.84
  • Difficulty: Easy
  • Time: Around 5 minutes a hole

Install

Watched a few YouTube videos first. I seemed pretty straightforward. I’d been lollygagging on installation because I was nervous that I’d mess up and break the tap. It’s really not hard, in fact it’s quite easy once you get through the first hole tapping.

Basically, you don’t want to force it. Get the cutting oil on there. The beginning is the most crucial part in getting it level and threads started. Some downward force is needed right in the beginning, but as soon as the tap can stand up on its own, then it’s time let the tap do its thing by just turning the handles. The ratcheting function was paramount for the Maverick given how close the holes are to the bed sides. Turn the tap and feel it cut until you feel resistance. Then turn it the opposite direction to clear the metal shavings. Don’t forget the cutting oil. All of the videos instructed a short back-and-forth motion. I found it easier to tap, then back out a ways, then go forward again. Halfway through, I would back it all the way out, clear the shavings out, and then go back in to prevent it from really getting stuck in there.

Eventually, when you hit the bottom of the hole, it gets super easy. That’s how you know you’re done. When finishing, it was much easier to free the tap from the handle and just unscrew it like a regular screwdriver without the ratcheting function.

Yay! I timed the last hole tap and it took me 4 minutes and 15 seconds to do; that’s with me taking my time, backing all the way out halfway through, cleaning up shavings. Easy does it. The first one probably took something like 10 minutes. I have to say working around my roll up tonneau cover really gets the back aching. LOL.

Screws took a T45 driver bit.

Boom! Done! MUCH easier than I thought it’d be!

Bedside Anchors

  • Bed Side Anchors
    • Cost: $20 (4 anchors) + $7.50 (25 screws) = $27.50
    • Bought some anchors off Amazon which fit perfectly with the Maverick’s pre-drilled, unthreaded, M6 holes.
    • Also bought M6x1.0 – 25mm screws. Decided on the flange head, but you don’t have to
    • Sadly, I never did end up installing these, because I couldn’t find what I did with them, and then I sold the Maverick.

2022 Ford Maverick Bed Measurements

2022 Ford Maverick XL Hybrid with Co-Pilot

I got the cheapo cheapest package (only added the Co-Pilot system). While it certainly feels low cost, this gives me wiggle room to upgrade!

Included are some measurements I’ve taken of the FlexBed, pickup bed, along with a closer look at the factory screw holes.

Note: My bed neither has a drop-in nor a spray-in liner.

Rear of Bed (near cab)

  • Green: rear wood plank divider slot
  • Blue: widest measurement above the wheel wells
  • Yellow: Indent on top of wheel wells
  • Pink: points to the direction of truck cab, rear wall of bed

Tailgate

  • Red: maximum width opening of the tailgate
  • Green: Height to top of tailgate lip from the lowest part of bed floor (the concave, not convex portion of floor ridges)
  • Blue: denotes the tailgate and both D-pillars

Bed Side

  • Hot Pink: denotes truck cab, tailgate, and bed floor
  • Beige: location and distance between bedside anchor screw holes
  • Medium Purple: distance between first set of bedside screw holes
  • Orange: distance between second set of bedside screw holes
  • Yellow: distance between third set of bedside screw holes
  • Light Blue: distance between fourth set of bedside screw holes
  • Green: length of bedside screw hole channel
  • Red: length of wheel arch shelf
  • Light Green: Space between rear of bed and rear wood divider
  • Medium Blue: approximate length of groove on top of wheel arch shelf
  • Dark Purple: width of both wood diver slots
  • Dark Blue: length of wheel arch shelf before it curves to the side of the bed
  • Gold: length of area between D-Pillar and where the wheel arch starts to curve
  • Light purple: distance from top of bed to floor of bed

Flex Bed Notes

  • The length of the bed = the length of the anterior wood divider slot (43.5in or 110.49cm), making the Flex Bed an almost square flat wall to flat wall (see pictures at bottom of post)
  • The pre-drilled bed side holes are in unequal increments
  • Bed side anchor point holes are all about 2 inches apart
  • The Bedside screw hole channel is useful for turning and fitting the wood dividers for the flexbed
  • Floor tie down anchor point holes are different from the bed side ones (scroll down to see more)
  • M6 x 1.0 are recommended fasteners (Metric), with 1/4″ is most similar in size (SAE)

Bed Side Anchor (near D-Pillar)

  • The anchor holes (side and floor) are not threaded, so you’d either need self-tapping hardware or a tapping set.
  • Side anchor holes are M6 sized

Bed Floor Tie Down Anchor Point

  • Floor anchor holes are not threaded
  • They are larger than M6 screws, so are likely M8 sized
Hard to find anchors for this hole distance
M6x1.0 is too small

Bed Side Screw Hole

  • Bed Side screw holes are threaded
  • M8 screws fit perfectly inside
Threaded
M6x1.0 and 1/4″ are too small

But the M8x1.25 fits perfectly!!

Pictures for Perspective

You can see the piece of wood which is the anterior wood divider. It fits perfectly lengthwise in the bed. The posterior divider is in place.