
2018 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2018 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with an asking price of $200—and that number is your first and most critical signal that something is fundamentally wrong with this listing.
The median comparable price for this vehicle is $42,000. The asking price sits 100% below that benchmark, which isn't a bargain—it's a data error, a placeholder, or a test listing. No legitimate seller moves a low-mileage (29,000 miles) high-performance Mercedes at that price point. The wholesale value alone is around $43,000, meaning you'd be buying below what a dealer would pay at auction.
Set that aside for a moment and assume the asking price is a typo. Even at market rate, you're entering a car with serious financial headwinds. This E63 AMG S depreciates sharply—you're six years into a vehicle that loses value aggressively in its first decade. Maintenance costs run approximately $3,500 annually, or $290 per month just for routine upkeep. The market direction is decisively negative (score: -0.5), meaning comparable prices are moving downward, not up.
The one bright spot: no open recalls and a clean safety history.
The most important thing you need to do immediately is clarify the asking price with the seller. Call and confirm whether $200 is a genuine ask or a listing error. If it's genuinely $200, walk away—something is hidden. If the actual asking price is closer to market ($42,000–$50,000), then you have a legitimate deal to evaluate, but you'll need to factor in aggressive depreciation and high maintenance costs before committing.
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