
2018 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2018 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with an asking price of $1,100—a figure that exists in a completely different universe from market reality. Your median comp price is $42,000. Your book clean value is $50,000. The asking price is 97% below market, and that's not a negotiating advantage. It's a structural problem that demands immediate investigation.
Before you get excited about the headline number, understand what's actually happening here. Either the listing contains a typo (a decimal point in the wrong place, for example), the vehicle is undisclosed salvage or flood-damaged, or there's something fundamentally wrong with how this deal was posted. None of those scenarios are good for you.
The vehicle itself has merit—it's a high-performance AMG variant with zero recalls and a clean mechanical history. But that quality is irrelevant if the price disconnect signals hidden damage, title issues, or a seller who doesn't understand what they're selling. The dealer information is also absent from your file, which removes a layer of accountability you'd normally rely on.
The one concrete positive: if this somehow clears as a legitimate deal, you'd be acquiring a car with an $8,056 cushion above its floor value, and routine maintenance runs about $3,500 annually—manageable for a car in this category.
Your next move is non-negotiable: contact the seller directly and ask why the asking price is what it is. Get a specific answer before you do anything else.
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