
2016 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2016 Audi RS7 Performance listed at $672—a price so disconnected from reality that it demands immediate scrutiny before you proceed. The median comparable for this vehicle sits at $70,025, meaning the asking price is 99% below market. This isn't a negotiation opportunity; it's a red flag that suggests either a catastrophic data entry error or a listing that won't survive contact with the seller.
Beyond the pricing anomaly, you're also facing a structural disqualification: this 2016 model falls below your stated cutoff of 2017 and newer. That gatekeeping exists for a reason—it protects you from deeper depreciation curves and older powertrains. At current valuation, this RS7 has retained just 34.4 cents on the dollar of its original purchase price, and that trajectory only steepens from here.
The vehicle itself is mechanically sound—all three recalls have been addressed and zero remain open—and annual maintenance costs of $3,000 are manageable for a German performance sedan. The dealer shows no red flags on reputation. But none of that matters if the asking price is fundamentally wrong or if the model year violates your acquisition parameters.
Your next move is straightforward: contact the seller directly and confirm the listing price. If $672 is accurate, walk away immediately—something is broken in either the vehicle or the transaction. If it's a typo and the real asking price is closer to $70,000, reassess against your 2017+ requirement and your BCV floor of $55,000.
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