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null Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$136ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S with a $136,000 asking price, and the data suggests this deal has serious structural problems you need to address immediately.

The core issue is valuation disconnect. The median comparable price across 116 active listings is $42,000, while the current market value estimate sits at $50,000 according to the BCV. The $136,000 ask creates a $86,000–$94,000 gap between asking and market reality. This isn't a negotiation opportunity—it's a red flag suggesting either a data entry error or a fundamental misunderstanding of the market on the seller's side.

Beyond price, you're buying into a high-maintenance platform. Annual maintenance costs run $3,500, roughly triple what you'd spend on a standard luxury sedan. The car shows 29,000 miles with a mileage hack strategy in play, meaning the depreciation curve will accelerate once normal mileage patterns resume. You're also working with limited dealer visibility—no Google rating or franchise status information available—which adds friction to any negotiation or post-purchase support.

The one positive: no open recalls and clean regulatory history.

The market direction is flagged as "strong sell" with a -0.5 sub-score, reflecting headwinds across valuation metrics. Before engaging further, verify the asking price directly with the dealer. A $136,000 ask on a $42,000–$50,000 market comp suggests either a typo or a dealer operating outside market reality. That conversation will tell you whether this is worth your time.

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