
2016 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2016 Audi RS7 Performance with an asking price of $732—and you need to stop and verify this number immediately, because it's almost certainly a data entry error or a listing mistake. The median comp price for this car is $70,025, meaning the asking price is 99% below market. Even the wholesale value sits at $55,000. No legitimate dealer is selling a clean, recall-free RS7 Performance for under a thousand dollars.
Beyond the pricing anomaly, there's a structural problem: this car falls below your stated 2017 model year cutoff. At eight years old, it's aging out of your acquisition parameters, and that's a deliberate boundary for good reason. The 2016 generation represents the last naturally aspirated RS7 before Audi turbocharged the platform, which makes it collectible to some buyers—but it also means higher maintenance costs (expect $3,000 annually) and steeper depreciation curves ahead.
The vehicle itself has merit: it's mechanically sound with zero recalls and represents a genuinely rare performance sedan. But the deal as presented is broken. The asking price is either a typo, a bait-and-switch, or a sign that something serious is wrong with the car that hasn't been disclosed.
Your next move: Contact the dealer directly and ask for clarification on the asking price in writing. If it's genuinely $732, walk away—something doesn't add up. If it's a listing error and the real price is closer to market, you still need to decline based on the model year cutoff.
9 more sections available with Starter
