@OP, There are great answers in the comments already, which I wholeheartedly agree with, but I must touch two points: age and new company.
If you are in the 20's or 30's, no matter anything else, I'd recommend only one course of action... Run Forrest, run!
If you are in the 40's, early 50's, and your skills are great or good ... run! If your skills are not good, and can be improved in the new place... run! If you are going to get stuck in a similar position at the new company, working with the same tools, I'd check the (size, income, main product, ability to survive a recession) of the company, and the insiders' perspective (glassdoor, reddit), and make a decision based on your findings.
If you are in the mid 50's or older, I'd put more weight on researching the new company. Here is the reasoning why. At that age, the company you move to would be probably your last one, since if you lose the job would be really hard to get another one. So you must be completely convinced the company would be able to go through a recession, and your position would not be eliminated (LIFO last in first out, especially when the "newcomer" is older and not expected to work 20 years more in the company).
In my case, I didn't leave in 2020 due to the reasons I just explained in the above paragraph. Ford should be able to sail through a recession (the Ford family will do anything to avoid bankruptcy, or they lose control of the company) and the F150 is still a good bet. My current position could be outsourced, but most probably it won't (at least a couple of years more). I have years of experience working at FMC, where most managers LL6 to LL4 in my area know me, even when some of them already retired, so no FILO applies. I am comfy, I have great salary, and flexible time allowing me to take my wife to doctor's appointments and more (at our age, doctors become our new "friends", since we spend more time with them, LOL).
Now, sorry for the previous lengthy explanation, that pretty much you are not going to use (for now), but I would like to add a fnal point... What's the catch with new job? If everything is really great, why are you still thinking about it? Are you really that lazy? Or maybe there is some other doubt? If you are doubting of your abilities, discipline and hardwork tend to hone those. If you are doubting because you think you would be missing a good place (Ford), you won't. If you are doubting because of the new company and you cannot defined it yet, replay the interviews in your head, try to find the subliminal cues that get you to the doubts. Maybe a phrase, maybe a tension in the air, maybe you didn't ask all the right questions (and you should ask them now, before accepting the new position).
Good luck!