
2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance listed at $2,210—and this deal fails on multiple critical fronts before you even consider the vehicle itself.
Start with the gate rejection: this car is model year 2014, and your acquisition criteria require 2017 or newer. That's a hard stop. The vehicle doesn't meet your baseline eligibility, regardless of price or condition.
But the pricing itself demands attention. The asking price sits 97% below the median comp price of $70,025 for comparable 2014 RS7 Performance models. That's not a negotiation opportunity—that's a red flag for either catastrophic data error, a stolen vehicle listing, or outright fraud. No legitimate dealer prices a performance sedan this far below market without a reason that will cost you far more than you save.
The underlying asset isn't without merit. The RS7 has a clean recall history and retains reasonable value at an estimated $55,000 (your BCV). But this vehicle carries $3,000 in annual maintenance costs—roughly double a standard luxury sedan—and you're already buying into a 10-year-old platform with significant depreciation behind it.
The market direction is strongly negative (score: -0.5), meaning comparable values are moving downward, not up.
Your next step: verify this listing's legitimacy with the dealer directly. Confirm the asking price is accurate and request full documentation—title, service history, and accident reports. If the price holds at $2,210, walk away. If it's a data error, re-evaluate only if the corrected price aligns with market comps and your model year criteria.
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