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2014 Audi RS7 Performance — photo 1

2014 Audi RS7Performance

$1,402ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance listed at $1,402—and this deal fails on multiple fronts, starting with a fundamental gate rejection: the car is too old. Audi's cutoff for acquisition is 2017 and newer, and this vehicle doesn't qualify, period.

But the numbers tell an even starker story. The median comparable price for active RS7s is $70,025 across 92 listings. Your asking price sits at roughly 2% of market value. This isn't a bargain—it's a red flag. The wholesale valuation (BCV) is $55,000, meaning even at that depressed level, you're looking at a $53,598 gap between asking and realistic market floor. The market direction is strong_sell with a -0.5 score, indicating this segment is moving downward, not up.

The deal scores 0/100. That's not a close call.

Add in the depreciation reality: this RS7 has retained only 34.4 cents on the dollar from its original value, and you're buying into a high-maintenance platform—expect $3,000 annually in routine upkeep alone. The recall history is clean, which is the only positive here, but it doesn't offset the structural problems.

This listing appears either mispriced, structured as a salvage or mileage-play transaction, or flagged for reasons not visible in standard comps.

Your next move: contact the dealer directly and ask why this vehicle is listed at $1,402. Get clarity on its actual condition, title status, and whether this is even a traditional sale. Don't proceed without that conversation.

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