
2014 Audi RS7Performance
Deal Analysis
Standard · 4/6/2026You're looking at a 2014 Audi RS7 Performance with an asking price of $640—and that number is your first and most critical problem. This isn't a negotiation opportunity; it's a data integrity issue that makes this deal impossible to evaluate responsibly.
Here's what the numbers tell you: the Black Book value sits at $55,000, the median comparable price across the market is $70,025, and the wholesale value hovers around $48,000. An asking price of $640 is 99% below market, which means either the listing contains a catastrophic typo (perhaps $64,000 was intended), the vehicle is being listed as salvage or parts-only, or there's missing context about its condition that hasn't been disclosed. None of these scenarios represents a legitimate acquisition opportunity.
Beyond the pricing anomaly, this 2014 model also falls outside the typical acquisition window—your cutoff is 2017 and newer, and this car is three years older than that threshold. That age compounds the risk profile, particularly given the $3,000 annual maintenance estimate you're facing for German performance engineering. The recall history is clean, which is a minor positive, but it doesn't offset the fundamental issues here.
The dealer information is also unavailable, leaving you without reputation verification at a moment when you need it most.
Your single most important next step: contact the seller immediately and request clarification on the asking price. Confirm whether $640 is a typo, whether the vehicle is being listed as salvage, or whether additional context explains this listing. Until that's resolved, this deal remains uninvestigable.
9 more sections available with Starter
