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null Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$200ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with a critical pricing problem that overshadows everything else in this analysis. The asking price of $200 is almost certainly a listing error—it's 99.5% below the median comp price of $42,000 and far below the car's $50,000 book value. This isn't a negotiation opportunity; it's a data anomaly you need to clarify immediately with the seller.

Setting aside the pricing mistake, the fundamentals here are mixed. On the positive side, this E63 AMG S has a clean safety record with no open recalls, and the dealer shows no warning flags for predatory financing practices. The market direction is strongly negative (scoring -0.5), which reflects broader headwinds for high-performance German sedans right now—but that's a market-wide issue, not specific to this car.

The real cost consideration is maintenance. You're looking at $3,500 annually for upkeep on a performance AMG variant. That's not unusual for this class, but it's a commitment you need to factor into your total cost of ownership alongside whatever the actual purchase price turns out to be.

The single most important thing you need to do right now is contact the seller and confirm the actual asking price. Once you have a realistic number—likely somewhere in the $40,000–$50,000 range based on comparables—you can reassess whether this deal makes sense for your budget and performance priorities.

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