A friend of mine has a six she is considering selling. It is a real nice car, no rust ever, long time owner, etc. Silver car with 14" Fuchs as well as a set of gas burners. Car has been repainted, fresh motor and Dr Evil trans rebuild. Not concours but still a nice car.
I've seen similar cars for sale asking the moon, but wonder what a realistic value is?
What ever he thinks it's worth. Shoot for the moon and adjust the price as nessasary.
Have him look at the Hagarty website's values, but to pick the condition level realistically & objectively based on the descriptions of each. They have a chart tracking values back several years & the current ones.
It's a great tool for pricing/valuing /4's & any classic car which they cover.
Better yet, tell him to keep it & avoid seller's remorse!
Tom
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I'll take a look at the Hagerty site and see what they have to say.
If it really is as nice as you say & numbers matching I'd GUESS $35k & up.
It is a nice car, and correct. After looking at the Hagerty web site, I'd put the condition of the car at between a 2 and a 3. Really needs some detailing to get it up a notch. Based on that, value between 40-50K, perhaps a bit less.
Many 914-6 never get sold publicly and thus never make the hagerty info. Plus, whenever you are looking at sold comps, they can be 6 months to 1 year old. I wouldn't sell a nice running 6 for less than $65k.
Btw - if anyone out there has a good running 6 and is willing to sell it for $40k or less, I've got cash in hand.
I am aware of a known recent numbers matching purchase. Sounds like a comparable car. Purchased for around 40k with additional parts stash. Asking and selling are two different things.
I would have to say in the 50's absent pictures and more info. These cars are going crazy in prize when you see rusted out stripped shells for $16,500.
I would love to see pictures of this car to come up with a realistic value that does not short the seller on the value of her car.
I am interested if you are not looking at it for yourself.
mikeā¦.
Can't price a car without all the facts, eye's on hands on the wheel and a real grasp of what your buying. Regardless of whether or not a car comes with the original engine the cost to rebuild, reinstall and tune come at a considerable cost. How does that play into the value. Plus or minus?
Then there is the Dirk Wrights disease that comes when the engine come out to put things back the way they should be. Seats get changed, heat exchangers are bad, warts get removed, non-m471 flares get put on. All stuff that is cool to some but eat away at the "collector car value."
Then there is the myth that certain vintage 911 engines are worth a kings ransom. Until you try to sell them... I know of two guys that fell for that myth. Had every tom dick and harry kick their tires. No joy.
So when looking at a car know what your really looking at. Be willing to pay factory 6 prices if the car is legit, unmolested, correctly painted. (no base clear modern paint jobs) no cool added. Unless the car suits your taste as a conversion with all the lipstick, pushup bras and pumps. And sellers, sell the car for what it is not some fantasy about what it could be "if" you do this or that. This or that cost money in the real world.
"I've seen similar cars for sale asking the moon"
I couldn't agree more with some of the other comments... call all the sellers back, none of the cars you have seen that are overpriced have sold. 80k and 90k isn't the correct market price for the car you described. Extra parts, engine, and wheels are not going to push the price to 80k.
The few that did sell in the 80k and up, they are special with unique color, they were lower milage, low ownership, fully documented and mechanically sound investment quality cars with all the paperwork.
I hope all goes well with the sale.
Hang on where did you get 80-90k from??
Everyone has made good points. I don't have pictures of the car in question at this time, but the PO, who is now deceased, bought the car about 1975, drove it, but kept it in good shape. He had it repainted by a top notch shop, and had the engine rebuilt by a known builder. It has always been garaged, never a bit of rust.
I posted the question because folks will ask a lot for their car, but asking and selling are two different things.
My experience on really nice 914's and 914-6's is they don't get advertised, word of mouth sells them or the owner has a list of people who want to buy. I sold a really nice '74 2.0 in May of 2014 for $20,000 and thought it was all the money, no advertising! I have a list of people who want to buy my '70 914-6 if I ever want to sell, currently not interested in selling but if I do it will be for all the money again!
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