The Ford F-150 is the best-selling vehicle in America — not best-selling truck, best-selling vehicle, for 47 consecutive years. If you're looking for an under-seat subwoofer enclosure for an F-150, you're in good company. You're also in a market flooded with options that range from well-engineered to genuinely terrible.

This guide covers what actually fits in a SuperCrew vs SuperCab, the acoustic tradeoffs of under-seat sealed enclosures, how the main competitors compare, and what to actually buy if you want bass that sounds good and doesn't wreck your cab.

SuperCrew vs SuperCab: Fitment Reality

Ford sells the F-150 in multiple cab configurations. For under-seat audio, two matter:

This distinction gets glossed over constantly. You'll see listings that say "fits F-150" without specifying cab type. A SuperCab owner who buys a SuperCrew-profiled enclosure ends up with a box that either won't close under the seat or forces it up, creating an uncomfortable seating angle for rear passengers. A vehicle-specific build uses your cab's actual measurements — not a compromise that "fits most."

Sound Quality vs Bass Output: The Sealed Enclosure Tradeoff

Under-seat subwoofer boxes are sealed designs. The geometry under a truck rear seat doesn't allow for a ported enclosure — there's no room for the port tuning length at reasonable enclosure volumes. Sealed boxes have real advantages and one significant limitation:

For most F-150 owners — daily drivers, families, people who occasionally need rear passengers — sealed under-seat is the right call. You get real bass without sacrificing cab functionality.

Comparison: SubCab vs Major Alternatives

Here's how the main options compare on metrics that matter for F-150 buyers:

Brand Price Range Lead Time F-150 Fitment Customization Construction
SubCab $174–$314 10–21 days SuperCrew + SuperCab specific Color, size, single/dual 3/4" MDF, built-to-order
Skar Audio $120–$280 1–3 days Generic "fits most trucks" Size only MDF, shelf stock
MTI Acoustics $250–$450 3–5 weeks Vehicle-specific Limited options MDF or fiberglass options
Super Crew Sound $350–$600+ 4–8 weeks F-150-specific High customization Fiberglass, premium

Skar Audio moves product fast and cheap but sells generic enclosures — they won't be profiled for F-150 tolerances. MTI Acoustics and Super Crew Sound offer vehicle-specific builds but at a higher price point and longer lead time. SubCab sits in the middle: SuperCrew and SuperCab-specific fitment, $174–$314 depending on configuration, 10–14 day turnaround on standard builds.

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What Sub Size Should You Choose?

For the F-150 specifically, here's the practical breakdown:

8" Subwoofer

Best for: accuracy-focused listening, tight bass, SuperCab builds with limited clearance. An 8" in a properly built sealed enclosure sounds significantly better than a poorly-designed 12". If you listen to a lot of rock, country, or acoustic genres, the 8" delivers clean low end without boom. Also the best choice if rear legroom is a priority — smallest footprint.

10" Subwoofer

Best for: balanced output and accuracy. The most popular configuration. More output than an 8" without the space demands of a 12". Dual 10" in a SuperCrew gives you serious bass output while keeping all rear seating functional. Works great for mixed listening — hip-hop, country, rock, podcasts at highway speed.

12" Subwoofer

Best for: maximum bass impact. Single 12" works in both SuperCrew and SuperCab. Dual 12" is SuperCrew-only. If output is the priority and you have a SuperCrew, a dual 12" under-seat setup will genuinely impress. The F-150 SuperCrew's rear pocket has enough depth to make a dual 12" sealed enclosure work well — you won't feel like you're compromising on a smaller sub.

See the full Ford F-150 configuration guide for pricing and fitment details on every year and cab type.