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null Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$89ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S asking $89,000 in a market where comparable vehicles are selling for $42,000. That's a $47,000 premium—roughly 112% above median—and it's the core issue you need to understand before proceeding.

The valuation picture is consistently unfavorable across every metric. Your deal score came in at strong_sell (-0.5), the depreciation analysis shows a $30,944 gap between asking price and current market value ($58,056), and the market direction itself is flagged as strongly negative. This isn't a marginal overask. This is structural misalignment between what's being asked and what the market will bear.

On the positive side, the car carries a clean recall history with zero open safety directives, and it's positioned at 29,000 miles—relatively low mileage for the segment. However, that mileage advantage doesn't close a $47,000 valuation gap. You also need to factor in the reality of ownership: this is a high-cost maintenance vehicle running $3,500 annually in routine upkeep, plus exposure to expensive repairs typical of AMG performance cars.

The seller remains unverified on an eBay listing with no dealer reputation data available, which adds uncertainty to the transaction itself.

Before engaging further, verify the seller's identity and legitimacy. If they're genuine, your immediate next step is a professional pre-purchase inspection by a Mercedes specialist—not to validate the asking price, but to understand what you're actually buying and what negotiation leverage you have.

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