
2021 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2021 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S listed at $2,399—a price that demands immediate scrutiny. The asking price sits 94% below the $42,000 median comp, and that gap isn't an opportunity; it's a red flag that something fundamental is wrong with this listing.
Here's what matters most: First, this price is almost certainly a data error or bait-and-switch. The car's book value sits at $50,000, and even accounting for its 29,000 miles and depreciation to roughly 42 cents on the dollar from original MSRP, a legitimate E63 AMG S in this condition should fetch $35,000–$45,000. A $2,399 ask doesn't align with market reality or the vehicle's actual condition profile.
Second, you're dealing with an eBay listing from a dealer with no visible reputation data—no Google ratings, no review count, no franchise status. That combination of anonymity plus an implausible price is a classic setup for either a scam or a car with undisclosed major damage or mechanical failure.
Third, even if the price were legitimate, this is a high-maintenance asset. Annual service runs $3,500, and you're inheriting a used performance sedan that's already lost 58% of its original value. The clean recall history is the only genuinely positive signal here.
**Your next move: Contact the dealer directly and ask for the vehicle's full service history, accident report, and a detailed explanation of the asking price. If they can't or won't provide these, walk away.** This deal's math doesn't work unless something is being hidden.
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