
2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance listed at $719—and that price is your first red flag. The median comp for this model sits at $70,025, meaning this asking price is 99% below market. That's not a negotiating advantage; it's a data error or listing mistake that requires immediate clarification before you proceed.
The vehicle itself has genuine strengths. It carries no open recalls, sits on the cleaner end of the depreciation curve for its age at 34.4 cents on the dollar, and the dealer has no fraud warnings attached. The RS7 Performance is a legitimate high-performance machine—capable, well-engineered, and still desirable in the used market. But those strengths are overshadowed by two critical problems.
First, the asking price is so detached from reality that you can't build a reliable negotiation strategy around it. Second, this car fails the age gate at 2014—it's below the 2017 cutoff that most institutional buyers use as a baseline for this asset class. That age matters: you're looking at $3,000 in annual maintenance costs on a machine that's already a decade old, and you're absorbing depreciation risk on an asset that's moving in the wrong direction.
The deal score is 0/100. The market direction is strong sell.
Before you contact the seller, verify the listing price. If $719 is genuine, find out what's actually wrong with the car. If it's a typo and the real ask is closer to market, you're still buying a 2014 in a market that prefers 2017 and newer. Either way, get clarity on price first.
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