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null Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$199ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with an asking price of $199—and that number is your first red flag. The median comp price for this model sits at $42,000, meaning this listing is priced 99.5% below market. This isn't a deal; it's a data error, a placeholder, or a click-bait listing designed to generate traffic.

Even if we're generous and assume the asking price is a typo, the fundamentals here don't support a strong buy. The market direction scores at -0.5 (strong_sell territory), and the BCV—the baseline cash value used by professional appraisers—is $50,000. That gap between asking price and actual market value tells you demand is weak for this particular vehicle right now.

On the positive side, this E63 AMG S has zero recall history, which is clean from a regulatory standpoint. But that's where the good news ends. You're dealing with an unknown dealer (no Google rating available), and if you do move forward, expect $3,500 in annual maintenance costs—this is a high-performance Mercedes, and upkeep is expensive.

The real issue isn't the asking price anomaly; it's that even at a realistic market price, you're buying into a depreciating performance sedan with substantial running costs and limited dealer transparency.

Before you proceed, contact the seller directly and confirm the actual asking price. If it's genuinely $199, walk away—something is wrong. If it's a legitimate listing at market rates, you still need to understand why this specific vehicle is struggling to sell.

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