
2019 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2019 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S listed at $1,499—and that price is almost certainly not real. The median comparable for this model is $42,000, meaning the asking price sits 96% below market. This isn't a hidden gem; it's a red flag that demands immediate clarification before you proceed.
Here's what matters most: First, the valuation disconnect is severe. Even accounting for mileage (29,000 miles is genuinely low), the $1,499 asking price doesn't align with any rational market scenario. The car's actual value sits around $50,000 based on comparable sales. Second, this is a high-maintenance asset. Annual maintenance runs $3,500 minimum, and you're buying into a complex German performance sedan that will command premium service costs for the foreseeable future. Third, the dealer's reputation is opaque—no Google rating, no review visibility, and no clarity on franchise status. Combined with the suspicious pricing, this raises questions about listing integrity.
The positive: the car carries no open recalls and shows reasonable mileage for its age, which suggests it's been maintained. But those advantages evaporate against the pricing anomaly and the dealer's anonymity.
Your next move is non-negotiable: contact the dealer directly and ask for clarification on the asking price. Confirm whether $1,499 is a typo (should it be $14,990 or $41,990?), a bait-and-switch tactic, or a data error. Don't engage further until that conversation happens. If the price is intentional and the dealer can't explain why, walk away.
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