996 prices are on the rise.
#31
Three Wheelin'
Those numbers are not accurate. I just looked up the value of a 1992 911 C2 in very good condition in KBB. $16,000. So they're only off by about $40,000. Porsche 911s have never been accurately priced in KBB or Edmunds or NADA.
#32
Three Wheelin'
#33
The frount cover of April 2017 GTPorsche magazine is a picture of a 996 & 997 ,
This is the heading of the article
996 vs 997 Carrera
As 996 Carrera values continue to rise they are converging with their newer 997 counterparts. This promotes an interesting debate – which 911 is the better prospect?
I just downloaded it , great article , the central theme is rising 996 prices overlapping with 997.1 prices .
This is the heading of the article
996 vs 997 Carrera
As 996 Carrera values continue to rise they are converging with their newer 997 counterparts. This promotes an interesting debate – which 911 is the better prospect?
I just downloaded it , great article , the central theme is rising 996 prices overlapping with 997.1 prices .
Last edited by Vancouver996; 03-13-2017 at 04:36 PM.
#34
Nobody pays book value, so the prices on there really don't reflect the market for any vehicle
#35
I wouldn't think anyone would buy a 996 for resale value, got my 03 C4S coming from a 14 Sti hatch, about equal value now, just hoping to stay reasonable prices, so as not to depreciate as much as the Subaru if that makes sense
#37
Rennlist Member
KBB numbers are useless for sports cars - for the buyer and the seller. When I bought my Z4, I paid 20% over KBB value... and 5 years later when I sold it, I sold it for 20% more than the current KBB value. It doesn't take desirability into account - just assumes all cars depreciate along a similar curve based on miles and age.
#38
Looks like the market has soft spots. $20k for a 2004 MY
https://www.cargurus.com/Cars/invent...ting=169572067
https://www.cargurus.com/Cars/invent...ting=169572067
#41
Racer
Join Date: Dec 2016
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You would expect the next 5 years a whole bunch of 996 Mk.1 to get to the scrap yard. Those with 150k+ miles you see at low prices but pristine early 50-75k miles car values are creeping up IMHO. There simply are not that many around allready now! Good ones I mean. The "average" cars without interesting options will stay at the bottom for a long time. Which is great, fantastic cars at reasonable prices!!
Volkert
Volkert
#42
KBB numbers are useless for sports cars - for the buyer and the seller. When I bought my Z4, I paid 20% over KBB value... and 5 years later when I sold it, I sold it for 20% more than the current KBB value. It doesn't take desirability into account - just assumes all cars depreciate along a similar curve based on miles and age.
#43
Then for the price of another Camry you can get a replacement engine.
After that, then for the price of yet another Camry you can get stuff like a new gearbox or valve job.
Then, for the price of a third Camry you can sort out things like a suspension, cooling system, exhaust, brakes, etc.
If these cars were so cheap, everyone on the planet would be commuting in a used Porsche.
#44
Rennlist Member
How true. I recently tried to get a trade in value for my 99C2 with 82k and it came back with some ridiculous number of like $7500. I've been in plenty of cars that were worth $7500 and i can tell you for sure my car doesn't fit into that price category. KBB is only good if you're the buyer and want to try and lowball the seller.
The real deals to be had for these cars are the ones that aren't selling. The market sometimes just cannot bear it. For example, there's a 99 996 Cab in St. Louis that's been for sale for 9 months or so. It has 46,000 miles. I'm not sure if the condition, but I would offer $16k and pay $17k for that car and probably win it for near $17k. Very unlikely that car's value would ever drop below that number, even if you doubled the mileage on it.
#45
this is the first "used" car that I've owned that won't lose a ton of value... it's an 05' (996) C4S, w/ factory aero, gaurds red on natural brown (rare combo), 38k miles
this car won't ever skyrocket - but it may go up some in value and I should always to be able to get back out what I put into it.... you can't say that with many used cars.
this car won't ever skyrocket - but it may go up some in value and I should always to be able to get back out what I put into it.... you can't say that with many used cars.