2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance asking $247,000—and this deal has a fundamental problem you need to understand immediately: the asking price is disconnected from market reality by a factor of more than three.
Here's what the numbers tell you. The median comparable price across 92 active listings is $70,025. You're being asked to pay $247,000 for a car worth roughly $70,000 in today's market. That's a $177,000 premium with no justification in condition, mileage, or rarity. The car sits at 29,000 miles, which is genuinely low, but even accounting for that advantage, the valuation gap is indefensible. Your Best Cash Value estimate of $55,000 reinforces this—you'd be overpaying by nearly $192,000.
Beyond price, there's a structural issue: this 2014 model falls below the 2017 model year cutoff your acquisition criteria establish. The car has already depreciated significantly and sits in a market direction flagged as "strong sell." While the recall history is clean and maintenance costs are manageable at $3,000 annually, these positives don't move the needle against a price that's simply too high.
The dealer's reputation is also unclear—no Google rating or franchise status available—which adds friction to an already problematic negotiation.
Your next step: walk away from this asking price entirely. If you're genuinely interested in this specific car, use the $70,000 median as your negotiation floor and understand that anything north of $75,000 is paying a premium you can't justify.
9 more sections available with Starter
