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2017 Porsche Cayenne GTS — photo 1

2017 Porsche CayenneGTS

$20,80820,000 micargurus
39Below Threshold

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a 2017 Porsche Cayenne GTS asking $20,808—a price that's 27% below the median comp of $28,500 and nearly half the Black Book Value of $45,000. That gap is your first signal: this deal is priced to move, and you need to understand why.

The headline strength is straightforward. The car carries zero recalls, sits at a reasonable 29,000 miles, and depreciation has already absorbed the steepest losses from its 2017 model year. Financially, you're past the worst of the curve. The asking price, if justified, represents genuine value in a market where comparable Cayenne GTS models are trading 27% higher.

But the hold score of 0.1 out of 100 exists for a reason. The dealer's reputation is completely unknown—no ratings, no review history, no franchise status. That matters when you're buying a Porsche that will cost $3,500 annually in maintenance. More critically, the depreciation analysis flagged an "unusual" picture that demands attention. Combined with minimal comp inventory (only 4 active listings), you're operating with limited market visibility.

This isn't a bad deal on its face, but it's a deal with material unknowns. The price discount is real, but it's also a red flag until you understand what's driving it.

Your next step: get a pre-purchase inspection from a Porsche specialist. That single step will either validate the pricing or expose why this car is discounted so aggressively. Don't negotiate until you have that report.

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