
2017 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2017 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with an asking price of $1,700 that doesn't reflect market reality. This is almost certainly a data error or placeholder listing—comparable 2017 E63 AMG S models are selling for a median of $42,000, meaning this asking price sits 96% below market. The market signal is unambiguous: strong sell at -0.5.
Here's what matters most. First, the price itself is a red flag that demands immediate clarification. If this is genuinely the asking price, something is fundamentally wrong with either the listing or the vehicle's condition that isn't captured in your data. Second, this is a high-maintenance car by design. You're looking at $3,500 annually in routine service just to keep the M177 V8 engine running—that's before any repairs. The vehicle has depreciated to 41.7 cents on the dollar from its original value, which is typical for a seven-year-old performance sedan, but it means you're buying deep into the ownership cost curve.
The positive: no open recalls and a clean regulatory history. The dealer isn't flagged for predatory financing practices. But those advantages are overshadowed by the price anomaly and the maintenance burden ahead.
Your next move is non-negotiable: contact the dealer directly and confirm the actual asking price in writing. Don't proceed with any analysis until you have clarity on whether this is a genuine listing or a system error. Everything else depends on that answer.
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