
The front seats are decently bolstered, with adequate thigh support. The lower back and rear bottom portions didn't support well, though, on a multi-hour, afternoon drive from Milwaukee along primarily rural roads down the western shore of Lake Michigan to Chicago.
Second- and third-row seats tend more toward utilitarian than coddling, with mostly flat seat bottoms and backs, even the second-row buckets. Otherwise, people room is quite respectable, especially with the twin buckets in the second row. With the second-row bench alternative, the center seat bottom and back cushions are above grade and with even less lateral support relative to the outboard seats. Ford says the third-row seat was designed to comfortably accommodate a 6'1 male, but in reality, occupants of that stature will find their legs quite a bit more articulated and their knees closer to their chests than elsewhere in the Freestyle's cabin. Headroom back there is commendable, though, thanks to a roofline that's several inches higher over the rear seats than at the windshield, a styling feat deftly masked by the angular C-pillar and roof rack.
The Freestyle offers great versatility with split-folding third-row seats, an available 60/40 second-row bench seat and a fold-flat front passenger seatback; the last allows hauling objects up to 10 feet long, like a surf board or a ladder, depending on the weekend's activities.
Storage is plentiful, including as many as a dozen cup holders, map pockets on all four doors and rear quarter panels, magazine pouches on the back side of the front seatbacks, a deep area behind the third row of seats (which the seats occupy when collapsed, so this is for occasional use), the usual center console and a modest glove box. And there's the ever-popular sunglasses holder incorporated into the overhead console. That overhead unit also houses the "conversation mirror" (a.k.a., the kid spy glass), although this combo feature gets displaced by the optional moonroof. Second- and third-row seats get reading lights.
The dash design is quiet and uncluttered, assembled from few bits and pieces, promising minimal squeaks and rattles as the Freestyle ages. Framed by the steering wheel are large, round, easy-to-scan, white-on-black (the Limited gets black-on-white) tachometer (sans redline, a result of Ford's ever-diligent cost cutting) and speedometer, between which are the fuel and engine water temperature gauges and, on the SEL and Limited, the digital informational display, all beneath a hood shading them from mid-day glare. At the far ends of the dash are two round air conditioning registers, identical to two atop the center stack; sadly, although all four look as if they rotate in their receptacles, they don't, adjusting only side-to-side and up-and-down, and only the two outboard registers close completely. To the left of the steering column are the headlight and dash light controls, and when ordered the rocker switch for the adjustable pedals. The high-beam, turn indicator and windshield/backlight wiper/washer levers sprout from the left and right side of the column, respectively.
At finger-tip level in the center stack is the stereo control head, for the most part ergonomic, except for the tuning function, which requires either enduring an interminable scan/seek process or depressing one or the other end of a smallish bar until the desired station is reached. Beneath this is a delightfully legible and manageable climate control panel, and below that are switches for the emergency hazard flasher and, when ordered, the traction control; a receptacle that can be converted to an ash tray if necessary; and one of three power points (another is in the center console, the lip of which is notched to allow a power cord to pass beneath the latched cover, the other in the cargo area). On the SE and SEL, the center stack surround is a pleasant, satin-finish metallic, on the Limited, a burl-grain applique. Above the glove box on the passenger side a towel bar-like hand grip is recessed into the dash. Door panels are gracefully uncluttered, with high-mounted opening levers and child-friendly power window switches embedded in the tops of wide arm rests."
