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null Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$35ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S listed at $35,000—a price that sits 17% below the $42,000 market median and roughly 40% below the $58,056 current market value estimate. On paper, that's compelling. In reality, the math demands scrutiny.

The core tension: this car is priced like a deal, but the market is actively selling against it. The market direction score of -0.5 signals strong headwinds—comparable E63 AMG S models aren't moving at these price points, which suggests either something is wrong with this specific vehicle or the asking price reflects desperation rather than opportunity. With no dealer reputation data available and limited visibility into the seller's history, you're operating with incomplete information about why this gap exists.

What works in your favor: the vehicle has no open recalls, sits at a reasonable 29,000 miles, and carries a clean safety record. The mileage positions it in the "hack strategy" space where you're buying before major service intervals hit. But here's the catch—routine maintenance runs $3,500 annually on this model, and the E63 AMG carries known issues that can push costs significantly higher.

The asking price is either a genuine opportunity or a warning sign. Before moving forward, you need to answer one question: get a pre-purchase inspection from an independent Mercedes specialist and understand exactly why this car is priced 40% below market value. That single step determines whether you're looking at a steal or a trap.

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