
Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with an asking price of $204 against a median comp price of $42,000—a gap so large it demands immediate scrutiny. While the deal score signals strong value, the numbers don't add up without explanation, and that's your first red flag.
Here's what matters most: First, the price discrepancy is extreme. A 100% gap between asking and median comp suggests either a data error, a severely compromised vehicle, or a dealer operating outside normal market channels. Second, you're dealing with a dealer whose reputation is completely unknown—no ratings, no reviews, no verifiable track record. That combination of an anomalous price and an unverifiable seller significantly increases your risk. Third, this E63 AMG S carries high baseline maintenance costs at $3,500 annually, with known issues that could push that figure higher. You're not just buying the car; you're buying into a premium service burden.
The clean recall history and strong-sell market signal are positives, but they don't offset the core problems: price opacity and seller credibility. Before you move forward, you need to understand why this asking price exists. Is it a typo? Is the vehicle salvage-titled, flood-damaged, or otherwise compromised? Is the dealer legitimate?
Your next step: Contact the dealer directly and ask for a detailed explanation of the asking price, full vehicle history documentation, and verifiable proof of their business legitimacy. Don't proceed without answers.
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