The 5.0L Coyote V8 is one of the best-sounding engines Ford has ever built. The stock exhaust system keeps that sound buried under layers of restriction and refinement. Here is what to run instead.
The 5.0L Coyote is a naturally aspirated V8 with a genuine performance character — high-revving, responsive, and capable of producing a genuinely distinctive exhaust note when the restriction is removed. The problem is Ford's stock exhaust system is engineered primarily for refinement and noise regulations, not for sound or maximum flow. The result is a truck that sounds competent but not memorable.
An aftermarket cat-back exhaust replaces everything from the rear of the catalytic converters back — the mid-pipe, muffler, and tips. On the Coyote this is where the biggest sound transformation happens, since the engine itself has the character to sound exceptional once the restriction is removed.
Cat-back vs axle-back: A cat-back system replaces more of the exhaust than an axle-back, giving better flow and a more significant sound improvement. Axle-back systems (muffler and tips only) are cheaper but deliver a smaller change. For the Coyote, cat-back is worth the extra investment if sound and performance are both goals.
Exhaust drone is the single biggest complaint from F150 owners who buy the wrong exhaust. Drone is the resonant, low-frequency boom that develops at specific RPM ranges — usually 1,500-2,500 RPM, exactly where you spend most highway driving time. It is genuinely fatiguing on long drives and one of the most common reasons people remove an exhaust after buying it.
Not all exhausts drone equally. The key variables are muffler design, pipe diameter, and whether the system includes resonators to cancel specific frequency ranges. Single-chamber mufflers (like the Flowmaster Super 44) produce a more aggressive, louder note but are more prone to drone. Multi-chamber and straight-through designs (like Borla's S-Type) typically produce a more refined tone with significantly less drone.
| Brand | Sound Level | Drone at Cruise | Tone Character | Price Range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Stock F150 | Quiet | None | Refined, flat | — |
| Flowmaster Super 44 | Loud | Moderate-High | Aggressive, deep | $300-500 |
| Borla S-Type | Medium-Loud | Low | Deep, refined | $700-1,000 |
| Magnaflow | Medium | Very Low | Clean, deep | $400-700 |
| Borla ATAK | Very Loud | Low-Medium | Aggressive, raspy | $800-1,100 |
A cat-back exhaust alone on a naturally aspirated engine like the 5.0L Coyote typically adds 5-15 horsepower depending on the system and how much restriction the stock exhaust was creating. This is measurable on a dyno but not dramatically seat-of-the-pants noticeable as a standalone modification.
Where cat-back exhaust gains compound is with a supporting tune. A tune recalibrates the ECU around the improved exhaust flow, adjusting fueling and ignition timing to take full advantage of the reduced backpressure. The combination of exhaust plus tune on a 5.0L Coyote can yield 20-30 horsepower over stock depending on other modifications present.
Best sequence: Install the cat-back exhaust first, drive it for a few weeks to confirm you're happy with the sound, then get a tune. Tuning too early means you may be calibrating around a setup you later change.
Cat-back exhaust installation on the F150 is a bolt-on process that most owners with basic tools can complete in 2-3 hours. You're unbolting the stock system at the cat flange, supporting the mid-pipe and muffler, then installing the new system in reverse. No cutting, welding, or specialist tools required on most aftermarket systems designed for the F150.
A second set of hands is helpful since exhaust sections are bulky and awkward to maneuver under the truck alone. Having a safe lift or ramps is recommended — working on a cold exhaust while the truck is on the ground is possible but significantly less comfortable than having it elevated.
Will a cat-back exhaust void my F150 warranty? Under the Magnuson-Moss Warranty Act, Ford must prove the exhaust caused any specific failure to deny a warranty claim. A cat-back exhaust alone is unlikely to void warranty coverage on unrelated systems like the engine or transmission.
Which F150 exhaust has the least drone? Borla S-Type and Magnaflow consistently rank lowest for drone among popular F150 exhausts. Both use multi-chamber or straight-through perforated core designs that cancel the resonance frequencies responsible for highway drone.
Can I install a cat-back exhaust myself? Yes — it's a bolt-on process requiring basic hand tools and a safe way to get under the truck. Most installations take 2-3 hours for a first-timer working carefully.
Does exhaust sound change after break-in? Yes, slightly. Most aftermarket exhausts settle into their final tone after 500-1,000 miles as the packing material and metal components reach operating temperature repeatedly. Initial sound can be slightly harsher than the settled tone.
Is cat-back or axle-back better for the F150? Cat-back for sound and performance. Axle-back for budget. If sound improvement is the goal, cat-back replaces more of the restrictive stock system and produces a more significant change for the investment.
The most consistent feedback from F150 owners who've upgraded their exhaust centers on three things: the sound transformation is more dramatic than expected, drone is the biggest regret when choosing the wrong system, and the Coyote V8 has a natural character that quality exhaust systems genuinely unlock rather than just amplify.
A common sentiment in the F150 community is that the Flowmaster Super 44 delivers exactly what you pay for — aggressive, loud, distinctly American V8 sound — but owners who do significant highway miles frequently wish they'd gone Borla instead. The drone issue is real and consistent across forum discussions on F150Forum.com, where the Super 44 on the 5.0L is repeatedly flagged for cruise drone at 65-75mph. Borla S-Type owners on the same platform almost universally report satisfaction with both sound and driveability.
Another consistent community observation is that exhaust sound varies meaningfully between cab configurations. Crew cab F150s with the longer body absorb more sound than SuperCab or Regular Cab configurations, meaning a system that sounds perfectly balanced in a crew cab can be noticeably louder in a shorter cab. If you're shopping based on sound clips recorded in someone else's truck, confirm they have the same cab configuration as yours before buying.
Flowmaster, Borla, and Magnaflow dominate F150 exhaust discussions, but a few other brands are worth knowing about depending on your budget and priorities.
A common concern among F150 owners who tow is whether an aftermarket exhaust affects towing performance or reliability. The short answer is no — a cat-back exhaust operates behind the catalytic converters and doesn't meaningfully change how the engine or transmission manages towing loads.
What does change is sound. Under heavy towing load the Coyote runs at higher sustained RPM, which amplifies exhaust note character. A system that sounds great at light throttle can become very loud under sustained towing load. Owners who tow frequently should factor in how the exhaust sounds at high sustained RPM, not just during normal acceleration.
One practical consideration: exhaust drone at towing speeds (55-65mph) can be more fatiguing than at highway cruise since you're often holding a specific throttle position for extended periods. If you tow regularly, this tips the balance further toward lower-drone systems like Borla or Corsa over Flowmaster's more aggressive single-chamber designs.
Bottom line for F150 exhaust shopping: Decide on your drone tolerance first. If you do long highway or towing miles regularly, start with Borla S-Type or Magnaflow. If you primarily drive in the city or on back roads where you can enjoy the sound without sustained cruise RPM, Flowmaster Super 44 delivers the most dramatic sound for the money. Either way, budget for a professional install and enjoy one of the best-sounding naturally aspirated V8s in the truck segment.