
2016 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2016 Audi RS7 Performance with an asking price of $1,275—a number that immediately disqualifies this deal, regardless of the car's condition or history.
Here's why: the median comp price for comparable vehicles is $70,025. You're being asked to pay 98% below market, which doesn't signal a bargain. It signals a problem. Either the listing is a data error, the car is undrivable, or there's a critical issue the seller hasn't disclosed. None of these scenarios work in your favor.
Beyond the pricing anomaly, this car fails your stated acquisition criteria on a structural level. Your cutoff is 2017 and newer; this is a 2016. That's not negotiable—it's a gate rejection. The model year matters because it affects resale, parts availability, and warranty coverage down the line.
The vehicle itself has clean marks: zero open recalls and no NHTSA history. Maintenance costs run about $3,000 annually, which is steep but standard for RS7 Performance ownership. The car has already absorbed most of its depreciation, sitting at roughly 34 cents on the dollar from its original $114,000+ MSRP.
But none of that overcomes the two core issues: the price doesn't make sense, and the year doesn't meet your requirements.
**Your next step: Contact the seller directly to clarify the asking price.** A $1,275 listing is either a typo ($12,750 or $127,500) or a sign to walk away entirely. Don't proceed further until you understand what you're actually looking at.
9 more sections available with Starter
