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Ready to turn your Ford Bronco into a capable off-road build? The front end is where you should start. A capable front end isn't just about looks; it's about protection, traction, visibility, and having the right tools to get yourself out of a situation when things go sideways on the trail.
We make a full lineup of Ford Bronco accessories that are designed to work together, and in today’s post, we're breaking down four of the big ones: front bumper, off-road lights, and onboard air. If you're building your Bronco for any type of off-road use, this is where we'd start.
Start With the Bumper
The factory plastic bumper looks the part, but it isn't built to take a hit from a rock or a tree, and it gives you nowhere to mount a winch or have a recovery point. The bumper is the foundation of the whole front end: it's your protection, your recovery anchor, and the mounting platform for most of your lighting.
For the 2021+ Bronco, you've got two directions to go:
Zenith Non-Winch Front Bumper
The Zenith is our modern, low-profile front bumper for owners who want serious protection and a clean factory-plus look without a winch hanging off the front. It's a full steel replacement bumper with an integrated LED light bar, twin jack points in the center pan, and twin-forged, chassis-mounted ARB-rated 8T recovery points on both sides.
The Zenith comes in two versions to match your flares: wide-flare models, currently $695 while supplies last, and narrow-flare models.
Summit Winch Bumper
If a winch is part of your recovery kit, the Summit Winch Bumper is the way to go. It's our tube-style winch bumper, built from heavy steel and compatible with winches up to 10,000 lb. You still get twin jack points and twin forged, bar-mounted 8T recovery points, plus the same 37" tire clearance and Integrit black finish as the Zenith.
Which one?
It really comes down to one question: are you running a winch, or planning on running a winch? If yes, go with the Summit. If you'd rather keep things low-profile and lean on recovery gear, kinetic straps, and a buddy's rig, the Zenith gives you the protection and recovery points without the extra bulk and weight up front.
Either way, plan for the added front-end weight. A steel bumper (especially with a winch) can settle your front suspension, so it's worth pairing the build with the right springs down the road.
Lighting: Build It in Layers
This is where a lot of people stop at "throw a light bar on it" and miss the point. The smart way to light a Bronco front end is in three zones, each doing a different job: the factory fog pocket, the bumper-mounted driving lights, and the high-mounted A-pillar lights. Build all three, and you've got the right tool for every condition: dust, fog, snow, tight trails, and wide-open high-speed runs.
Zone 1: The Fog Pocket
The factory fog location is the easiest upgrade and the one most people do first.
If your Bronco came with factory fogs, the NACHO SAE Plug N Play Fog Light Kit is a true bolt-in swap. Our NACHO Quatro SAE lights fit into the factory pocket using included brackets and OEM connectors that plug straight into the factory fog plug. Each light also carries our Trail Running Light (TRL) feature with an included fuse-tap harness. Pick your lens: white for maximum usable output, or amber, which cuts glare in fog, dust, and snow.
Both of our kits come with our NACHO Quatro Fog Mounts for easy installation.
Zone 2: On the Bumper (Driving Lights)
Both the Zenith and Summit have the ability to mount driving lights. ARB's lighting range covers every preference here:
- Intensity IQ
- Intensity Solis
- Intensity V2
- NACHO Grande
- NACHO Quatro
- NACHO Nano
Zone 3: Up High (A-Pillar / Ditch)
The last layer is high-mounted lighting that fills in the foreground and the sides, the area your bumper lights can't reach. The NACHO A-Pillar Mounts are powder-coated steel brackets that bolt to the factory mounting bosses near the mirror mount. Pair them with NACHO Quatros, Grandes, or TM5s, and you've got ditch lights that light up corners and trail edges without blinding yourself.
Onboard Air: Powers the Locker, Inflates the Tires
Onboard air is the connective tissue of the whole build. It's what engages your Air Locker, and it's what airs your tires back up at the end of a trail after you dropped pressure for traction. It'll also run air tools and inflate camp gear. Few upgrades earn their keep in as many ways as a quality onboard compressor.
For the Bronco, both of our kits use an engine-bay mount that's been validated by Ford engineers. This mount is 100% bolt-on to the factory mounting points and supports both the 2.3L and 2.7L engines. Here are the options we offer:
Not sure which one to get? We’re happy to help answer your questions below!
How It All Works Together
That's the whole front end, and the pieces are designed to stack:
- The bumper protects the front of the truck and gives you rated recovery points and a platform for your lights.
- The lighting turns night and bad weather from a stop into a non-issue.
- The onboard air powers that locker and airs you back up to drive home.
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