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Audi RS7Performance

$20ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at an Audi RS7 Performance listed at $20, and the data tells a straightforward story: this isn't a deal worth pursuing.

Start with the price disconnect. The asking price sits at roughly one-third of the median comp price of $70,025, and even the Black Book Value—a conservative wholesale estimate—puts this car at $55,000. That $35,000 gap between asking and BCV isn't a negotiation opportunity; it's a red flag. The deal scores -0.5 out of 100, placing it firmly in strong sell territory. Market direction is negative across the board.

The car itself is mechanically sound. No open recalls, clean history on that front. At 29,000 miles, it's still relatively young for an RS7 Performance. But mechanical condition doesn't fix the fundamental problem: the asking price is detached from reality.

Here's what matters most: you'd be paying $20 for a car worth $55,000 to $70,000 at retail. That gap suggests either a listing error, a severely distressed sale, or a vehicle with undisclosed issues that haven't surfaced in the data you're seeing. Even if the price is legitimate, annual maintenance runs $3,000—this is an expensive car to own, and you need to know exactly what you're buying before committing.

Before you move forward, contact the seller directly and ask one question: why is this car priced so far below market? Get a clear answer. If the explanation doesn't hold up, pass.

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