“Great communication. Informative installation videos. Durable seat covers and steering wheel wrap. Nice upgrade from the flimsy, worn-out covers I had.”
“They feel super comfortable and were easy to install! Can't wait to get my custom rear seat covers!”
“There's not much to say — you simply have to buy them yourself because they truly speak for themselves. From the online purchase to the fit, top notch.”
“I couldn't have been more pleased with this product!”
“Great fit, great looks, great quality. Exactly what I wanted for my truck.”
A 2023 F-150 is in that sweet spot where the truck still feels fresh, but the first signs of wear can start sooner than most owners expect. It also sits right before Ford’s 2024 update, when the lineup moved to a standard 12-inch screen across trims. In 2023, the truck was already part of the current-generation family, with an 8-inch touchscreen as standard and a more premium cabin than older F-150s, depending on trim. That makes this the right time to protect the seats before normal use starts showing up in the places you touch every day.
Seat Cover Solutions put this list together for 2023 F-150 owners who want practical seat-focused upgrades that actually make a difference. The goal is simple. Protect the seat surfaces early, keep the cabin easier to clean, and stop the usual wear from turning a newer truck into one that already feels used.

Seat Upgrades Worth Doing on Your 2023 F-150
1. Seat Covers (~$374.99): The Seat Starts Wearing Before You Notice
The seats are unprotected from the first drive. Cloth can hold spills and odor deeper than it looks. Vinyl can flatten and harden at the edges. Leather usually tells the story first at the driver bolster, where every entry and exit rubs the same spot. That is why 2023 F-150 seat covers are still the first upgrade that matters most.
Seat Cover Solutions’ FAQ currently lists a bundled front-and-back set at $374.99. On a 2023 truck, the real benefit is stopping wear before it becomes obvious. If you want the most useful place to start, custom-fit eco-leather seat covers, custom-fit seat covers over universal fit, and seat covers that cover the whole seat, all fit this exact decision.
2. Leather Conditioner (~$15 to $25): For Lariat and Above, Do This Before the Cover Goes On

If your 2023 truck is a Lariat, King Ranch, Platinum, or Limited, the leather may still look excellent. That does not mean it is protected enough for years of sun, body oils, and daily flex at the driver bolster. This is the easiest point to preserve it, because you are working ahead of the damage instead of reacting to it later.
A good leather conditioner helps keep the surface flexible before it starts drying out, which gives the seat cover a better surface to sit against and helps the leather age more slowly. After that, steady seat cover cleaning and care helps the interior stay easier to manage.
3. Seat Gap Fillers (~$15 to $25): The Gap Beside the Seat Scratches Everything Going In
The gap between the front seat and center console is where cards, coins, pens, phones, and crumbs disappear. It is also where those things rub the seat side panel on the way down. On leather-trim trucks, that scuff can show up faster than most owners expect. On cloth and vinyl, it still creates dirt buildup exactly where the seat keeps moving.
Seat gap fillers seal that space in seconds, which helps stop new scratches before they start and keeps the front row easier to keep clean. It is one of those cheap upgrades that solves a problem you notice almost every week.
4. Windshield Sunshade (~$20 to $35): UV Works on the Seat Surface Every Hour You Park Outside
Sun damage is quiet at first. Then one day the seat looks a little lighter, the dash looks a little drier, and the stitching does not look as crisp as it did when the truck was new. That is why a sunshade matters even on a 2023. Waiting until the fading is obvious means the damage has already been building for a while.
A folding windshield sunshade blocks direct UV and lowers cabin temperature every time you park, which helps the seats and dash hold up better over time. It is one of the cheapest habits in this whole list, and one of the easiest ways to help the interior keep looking like a 2023 interior.
5. Rear Seat Kick Mats (~$20 to $35): The Seat Back Takes Hits You Never See Happening
If your truck carries kids, adults, pets, or regular rear passengers, the back of the front seats takes more contact than most owners notice in real time. Shoes, knees, bags, and boot heels all press into the seat back, and those little hits add up fast.
Kick mats help by taking that contact before it reaches the seat back itself. They make even more sense if your rear seats actually get used, because the front and rear seat areas wear differently. Seat covers for front and rear seats are worth thinking about the same way: different surfaces get used differently, so they need protection in different ways.
6. Steering Wheel Cover (~$25 to $40): The Grip Points Wear Faster Than Any Other Surface
The steering wheel is still one of the fastest ways a truck starts showing age. The 9 and 3 o’clock positions take the same pressure every drive, so those are usually the first spots that lose texture, flatten, or start looking shiny. It happens on vinyl and leather alike.
A fitted steering wheel cover adds grip and puts a protective layer over those high-contact points. It is not the flashiest upgrade here, but it protects one of the few surfaces you touch every single time you drive.
7. Seat Back Organiser (~$20 to $35): Rear Passengers Need Somewhere to Put Things That Isn’t the Seat
Rear passengers always bring something with them. Phones, tablets, chargers, water bottles, and small bags all need a place to go. Without an organizer, those items end up leaning on the seat back, wedged into door pockets, or dropped into the footwell. Over time, that turns into clutter and wear instead of usable storage.
A fitted seat back organizer turns the back of the seat into useful storage without forcing the seat itself to take the abuse. It is one of the easier ways to make the cabin feel more organized without doing anything permanent. If you want the whole interior to stay easier to manage, seat cover cleaning and care fits the same everyday-use mindset.
8. All-Weather Floor Liners (~$80): The Seat Upgrade That Protects Everything Below It
Seats and floors work together more than most owners think. Dirt from boots transfers to the seat edge during entry and exit. Spills spread. Gravel and mud in the footwell end up against the lower seat trim. If you protect one and ignore the other, you leave a gap in the whole setup.
All-weather floor liners help catch the mess before it spreads into the carpet and back onto the seats. If you are setting them up alongside custom-fit seat covers, seat cover installation tips for a perfect fit and seat cover installation without removing seats make the whole job easier. Once both are in, the lower cabin feels sorted.
Frequently Asked Questions
What generation is the 2023 F-150?
The 2023 F-150 is part of the current-generation family that started with the 2021 redesign. It came before the 2024 update, which is why 2023 still carried the earlier screen and trim structure while keeping the same core platform underneath.
Do 2023 F-150 seat covers work with heated and ventilated seats?
Yes, if you use the right custom-fit seat covers and the right material. Seat Cover Solutions says its seat covers are designed to work with heated and ventilated seats, which is why breathable, fitted material matters more than just picking any cover that looks good. If this feature matters to you, seat covers for heated and ventilated seats are the right place to start.
How is the 2023 F-150 different from the 2024?
The 2024 truck brought the exterior refresh and made the 12-inch touchscreen standard across the lineup. Ford’s 2023 towing guide still described a standard 8-inch touchscreen with available SYNC 3, which is one of the clearest cabin differences between the two model years.
Does the 2023 F-150 come with PowerBoost hybrid?
Yes. Ford’s 2023 towing materials include the 3.5L PowerBoost Full Hybrid V6 in the 2023 F-150 powertrain lineup, so PowerBoost was still part of the truck that year. Which engine you have does not change the need to protect the seats early.
What cab styles does the 2023 F-150 come in?
The 2023 F-150 was offered in multiple cab configurations, and the exact rear-seat layout changes depending on whether the truck is a Regular Cab, SuperCab, or SuperCrew. That is why exact seat bundle fitment matters before you order.
Ready to Upgrade Your 2023 F-150 Seats?
These seat upgrades work because they protect every place daily use hits first. The seat surface, the seat back, the gap beside the seat, the floor below it, and the sun-facing areas all start wearing long before the truck feels old. Start with custom-fit seat covers, then add the floor liners and the small fixes that keep the rest of the cabin easier to live with.
If you want the shortest version of the plan, protect the seats while they still look good. That is where seat covers and resale value and replacing seats vs using seat covers start to matter. Select your year, make, and model on the product page to confirm your exact fit. Your 2023 F-150 was built to last, and the right seat protection helps the interior last with it.