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2018 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S — photo 1

2018 Mercedes-Benz E63AMG S

$150ebay

Deal Analysis

Standard · 4/6/2026

You're looking at a 2018 Mercedes-Benz E63 AMG S asking $150,000—and this deal has a fundamental problem you need to understand upfront.

The asking price sits 258% above the median comp price of $42,000 for comparable vehicles. To put that in perspective, the wholesale book value is $50,000, meaning you'd be paying three times what the market says this car is worth. Even accounting for the relatively low mileage at 29,000 miles, there's no scenario where this pricing aligns with reality.

The vehicle itself is solid. It's a high-performance sedan with no open recalls and a clean safety history. Maintenance will run roughly $3,500 annually, which is manageable for this class. But none of that changes the core issue: you're being asked to overpay dramatically.

The market direction is sending a clear signal too. This is registering as a strong sell at -0.5, meaning comparable inventory is moving downward in price, not upward. You're not buying into appreciation or scarcity—you're buying into a seller's misalignment with market conditions.

The dealer reputation data is thin, which adds another layer of uncertainty. You can't validate whether this is a pricing error, a negotiation anchor, or something else entirely.

Your single most important next step: get a pre-purchase inspection from an independent Mercedes specialist. But before you spend money on that, initiate a serious negotiation conversation anchored to the $42,000–$50,000 range. If the seller won't move meaningfully, walk.

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