
2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance asking $150,000, and this deal fails on multiple critical fronts. The most damaging issue is price: the seller is asking $150,000 when the median comparable sale price sits at $70,025 across 92 active listings. That's a 114% premium over market—you're being asked to pay more than double what this car is worth. Even accounting for the low mileage (29,000 miles) and clean recall history, the Black Book valuation of $55,000 and current market value of $98,313 tell the same story: severe overpricing.
The second problem is structural. This 2014 falls outside your acquisition parameters—your cutoff is 2017 and newer. That age restriction exists for good reason: older performance cars carry higher maintenance costs ($3,000 annually for this RS7) and depreciation risk.
The market direction reinforces the rejection. The RS7 segment is showing strong_sell signals (score: -0.5), meaning demand is weak and prices are moving downward, not up. This isn't a car that will hold value or appreciate.
The dealer reputation data is sparse, which adds uncertainty to an already weak proposition. You have no visibility into their track record.
Your next step: pass on this listing entirely. The asking price is so detached from reality that negotiation won't bridge the gap. Redirect your search toward 2017+ examples in the $70k range where the fundamentals align.
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