
Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S asking $40,000—and while that number appears attractive on its surface, the deal structure contains serious red flags that demand your attention before proceeding.
Start with the pricing disconnect. The asking price sits $2,000 below median comps at $42,000, which looks like a 4.8% discount. But that's misleading. The Black Book value for this vehicle is $50,000, meaning you're actually $10,000 below fair market—a 20% gap that doesn't align with normal market variance. The depreciation analysis suggests the current market value may be closer to $58,056, which makes this asking price even more problematic. When a car is priced this far below multiple valuation benchmarks, the reason matters enormously, and the data doesn't clearly explain it.
The second critical factor is ownership cost. This E63 AMG S carries an estimated $3,500 annual maintenance bill—roughly triple a standard Mercedes sedan. Over five years of ownership, that's $17,500 in maintenance alone, before any major repairs. Combined with the $40,000 purchase price, your total cost of ownership climbs quickly, and that math only works if you're confident about the vehicle's mechanical condition.
The third issue is visibility. You have limited dealer reputation data and no clear explanation for why this performance sedan is priced so far below market. That's not necessarily disqualifying, but it is a warning signal.
Your next step: Get a pre-purchase inspection from an independent Mercedes specialist. That inspection will either justify the discount or reveal why this deal is priced the way it is. Don't proceed without it.
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