
2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance asking $247,000—and you should pass on this deal. The numbers tell a clear story of misalignment between asking price and market reality.
Start with the most glaring issue: this car is priced 252% above its median comparable value. The market shows 92 active listings of similar vehicles averaging $70,025. At $247,000, you're paying more than three times what the market will bear. Even the car's own current value estimate sits at $98,313—meaning you'd be overpaying by 151%. There's no negotiation path that closes this gap reasonably.
The second problem is age. This 2014 falls below the 2017 minimum cutoff built into acquisition frameworks for good reason—it's already traveled far down its depreciation curve at just 34.4 cents on the dollar. You're buying a car that's absorbed most of its value loss already, with limited upside and compounding maintenance costs ahead. Budget $3,000 annually for upkeep, roughly double a standard luxury sedan.
The one bright spot: zero open recalls and a clean service history. But that doesn't offset the fundamental economics.
Your next move is straightforward: walk away from this listing. If you're genuinely interested in an RS7, use that $247,000 to find a 2018–2020 model in the $150,000–$200,000 range where pricing aligns with market data and you're buying into the performance curve rather than out of it.
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