A used steering column is one of the most cost-effective repairs in the used auto parts market. New OEM steering columns for Ford and Chevy trucks run $600–$1,200. Used columns from low-mileage donor vehicles cost $150–$380 — the same part, half the price or less. This guide covers everything you need to order the right column, avoid the most common pitfalls, and get it installed without a return trip to the supplier.
FirstChoice carries Ford, Chevy, Jeep, and Dodge steering columns — function-verified, 30-day warranty.
Check Availability →Who Actually Buys Used Steering Columns (And Why)
Based on FirstChoice’s actual sales data, the most common reasons customers order a used steering column:
- Tilt mechanism failure — Column droops or won’t hold position. Extremely common on Ford F-150 (2004–2014) and Silverado (2003–2013) at 150,000+ miles.
- Ignition lock cylinder failure — Key sticks, won’t turn, or breaks off inside. Replacing the full column is often more cost-effective than sourcing just the cylinder on high-mileage trucks.
- Collision damage — The collapsible column section compresses in a front-end collision. A compressed column cannot be reset and must be replaced.
- Clock spring failure + multiple electrical issues — When the clock spring fails and is integrated into the column assembly, replacing the full column with a tested unit is faster than sourcing individual components.
- Multi-function switch failure — Turn signals, cruise, and wipers all fail simultaneously due to internal switch degradation. Full column replacement is often cheaper than the switches alone.
Top Makes — Steering Column Sales at FirstChoice
Ford accounts for the largest share of steering column orders (38% of sales), followed by Chevrolet/GMC at 25%, and Jeep at 8%. Here’s the breakdown by make with typical pricing:
Ford — #1 VolumeF-150, F-250, F-350, Explorer, Mustang. Most common: F-150 2009–2014.
Chevrolet / GMC — #2 VolumeSilverado, Sierra, Tahoe, Suburban, Yukon. Column-shift and floor-shift variants available.
Jeep — #3 VolumeGrand Cherokee (WJ, WK), Wrangler (TJ, JK). SKREEM anti-theft — swap original ignition cylinder.
Dodge / RamRAM 1500, 2500, 3500. Column shift vs. floor shift — confirm before ordering.
Used Steering Column Cost by Make
| Make / Model | Typical Used Price | New OEM Price | Savings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ford F-150 (2004–2014) | $180–$320 | $720–$960 | 60–75% |
| Ford F-250 / F-350 | $200–$375 | $800–$1,100 | 65–75% |
| Chevy Silverado (2003–2018) | $150–$280 | $580–$840 | 65–75% |
| GMC Sierra | $150–$280 | $580–$840 | 65–75% |
| Jeep Grand Cherokee WK (2005–2010) | $175–$350 | $640–$900 | 60–70% |
| Jeep Wrangler TJ (1997–2006) | $140–$240 | $420–$620 | 60–70% |
| Jeep Wrangler JK (2007–2018) | $150–$280 | $480–$700 | 60–70% |
| Dodge RAM 1500 (2002–2018) | $160–$320 | $600–$880 | 60–70% |
| Toyota Tacoma / Tundra | $130–$240 | $420–$680 | 60–70% |
Guides for Your Make
Used Steering Column
Inspection Guide
8 things to check before buying — tilt function, ignition, clock spring, wiring, PATS/SKREEM, warranty.
Read the Inspection Guide →Steering Column vs. Steering
Shaft
Not sure which part you actually need? Symptoms for each, cost comparison, and the most misdiagnosed steering clunk.
Column vs. Shaft Guide →Shop Used Steering Columns
Ford, Chevy, Jeep, and Dodge columns in stock — 30-day warranty, tested function, fast shipping.
Check Availability →Critical Compatibility Rules
Rule 1: Match Generation, Not Just Year
Steering columns are generation-specific. A 2007 F-150 (10th gen, 2004–2008) column will not interchange with a 2009 F-150 (12th gen, 2009–2014) even though they look similar. Mounting brackets, connector positions, and multi-function switch configurations differ between generations.
Rule 2: Match Trim Level Electrical Configuration
A base-trim column (no cruise control stalk, no audio controls) has fewer wiring connectors than an XLT or Lariat trim column. Installing a base column in a higher-trim vehicle results in dead cruise control and steering wheel audio buttons.
Rule 3: Confirm Column Shift vs. Floor Shift
Trucks available with column-mounted shifters (Silverado, Sierra, RAM, some F-150 work trucks) have a gear shift selector integrated into the column. This is a completely different column from the floor-shift version — they are not interchangeable.
Rule 4: Anti-Theft System (PATS/SKREEM) — Know Your Plan Before You Order
If the used column comes with an ignition cylinder, you’ll need to either swap your original cylinder (recommended — no programming required) or have the new cylinder programmed via Ford IDS or Chrysler wiTECH. Decide which approach you’ll take before the column arrives to avoid delays.
Confirm before you order:Chevy/GMC Silverado Sierra columns are often compatible between the two brands within the same generation (GMT900 2007–2013, for example) because the vehicles share the same platform. But always verify — trim electrical packages can still differ.
Used vs. Remanufactured Steering Column
| Used OEM Column | Remanufactured Column | New OEM Column | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost | $150–$380 | $280–$550 | $600–$1,200 |
| Quality | Original OEM parts, mileage-dependent | Rebuilt with new tilt mechanism and ignition | Factory new |
| Warranty | 30–90 days (supplier-dependent) | 1 year typically | 1–3 years |
| Availability | Excellent for popular makes | Limited to high-volume models | Available from dealer |
| Best for | Under 120K miles donor; budget repair | High-mileage repair where tilt wear is the issue | Newer vehicles under warranty concern |
For most used auto repairs, a used OEM column from a low-mileage donor vehicle is the right choice. The tilt mechanism and ignition cylinder on an 80,000-mile column have plenty of life remaining. Remanufactured columns make more sense when the tilt mechanism itself is the failure point and you want a longer warranty.
5-Step Ordering Process
- Gather your exact vehicle info. Year, make, model, trim level, engine, 4WD or 2WD, and whether you have a column shifter or floor shifter. Also note: do you have telescoping, or tilt-only?
- Identify your anti-theft plan. If your vehicle has PATS (Ford) or SKREEM (Chrysler/Dodge/Jeep), decide before ordering whether you’ll swap the ignition cylinder or have the column programmed. Tell the supplier when ordering.
- Request the column specs from the supplier. Mileage, tilt function confirmed, telescoping confirmed if applicable, wiring connector count, and whether the ignition cylinder is included.
- Confirm warranty scope. Ask whether the warranty covers tilt mechanism, electrical functions, and ignition operation — not just the physical column structure.
- Plan the install. Most steering column swaps are 2–4 hour jobs. You’ll need a steering wheel puller, a Torx set, and a pin tool for ignition cylinder transfer. Factor in alignment check if the column U-joint position changed.
“Ordered a used steering column for my 2012 Silverado — the tilt had completely given out and the wheel was dropping. FirstChoice confirmed it had tilt function and floor shift (not column shift) before shipping. The column arrived, took me 3 hours to swap it out. Tilt works perfectly, saved $590 over dealer quote.”
Ready to order? FirstChoice carries Ford, Chevy, Jeep, and Dodge steering columns — verified tilt/telescoping, 30-day warranty, ships fast.
Find Your Steering Column →Frequently Asked Questions
Is it worth buying a used steering column?
Yes. Used columns from low-mileage donors cost 50–75% less than new OEM parts. A tilt mechanism and ignition cylinder on an 80,000-mile column have significant service life remaining. Order from a supplier who tests the tilt function and offers at least a 30-day warranty.
How long does a used steering column last?
A column from a vehicle under 100,000 miles should last another 80,000–120,000 miles under normal conditions. The tilt mechanism is the primary wear component — ask for mileage and confirm tilt function before ordering.
What is the most common steering column failure on Ford F-150?
Worn tilt mechanism (column droops), clock spring failure (airbag light + dead horn), and ignition lock cylinder wear are the top three F-150 column failures. The clock spring can be replaced separately. Tilt failure typically requires full column replacement.
What makes and models does FirstChoice carry steering columns for?
Ford (F-150, F-250, F-350, Explorer), Chevrolet (Silverado, Tahoe), GMC (Sierra, Yukon), Jeep (Grand Cherokee, Wrangler), and Dodge/Ram (1500, 2500, 3500). These are the highest-volume makes based on actual order data.
