New C-Class ~ Official W205


I also hope they don't increase the price too much! Looking forward to getting my C-class diesel (at long last).

Last edited by Glyn M Ruck; Dec 18, 2013 at 08:28 PM.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG
The announced prices for the W205 in Germany have increased over the W204 but not that much:
W205 - C220 Bluetec / C180 / C200 - 38.675 / 33.558 / 36.414 euros
W204 - C220 Bluetec / C180 / C200 - 37.544 / 33.230 / 35.402 euros
Car and Driver says that, in line with what Mercedes is doing in Germany, US prices for the W205 won't change that much:
Of course, as we've been discussing, the RWD base model won't be available at launch in the USA so I assume the W205 C300 will be around what the W204 C300 goes for now which is $39,400. That's also pretty much where the 328i xDrive is as well.
Last edited by ddarko; Dec 17, 2013 at 08:17 PM.

Recently helped a friend in Dallas spec an ML 350 Bluetec. Base price was about $55K. By the time we were finished with it, it was $96K. He owns one in SA as well & most of the gear was standard here but we pay for that & all vehicles here are sold with a Mobilodrive plan ~ no option.
In the U.S., there is stable long-term data that the purchase price approximates one-third of annual household income. Households with $100k incomes tend to buy vehicles close to $33,000, and so on. There are variances of course, but this has been a general finding for several decades. From comments from members in other countries, it seems the car costs a higher percentage of income, and the payments may well be extended over a longer lifespan, but that is my speculation.
320i starts at $32,750 so the C250 is about $3k more.
328i xdrive starts at $39,300 which is very close to the C300 4matic $39,400 price
Finally the 335i starts at $43,400 which is actually more than the C350 at $42,100.
So MB lower end is higher $ than BMW, but their higher end (larger engines) is slightly less than BMW starting price.
I suspect the W205 C300 4matic will be around $41k base.

In the U.S., there is stable long-term data that the purchase price approximates one-third of annual household income. Households with $100k incomes tend to buy vehicles close to $33,000, and so on. There are variances of course, but this has been a general finding for several decades. From comments from members in other countries, it seems the car costs a higher percentage of income, and the payments may well be extended over a longer lifespan, but that is my speculation.
Your speculation is spot on. People in other markets spend a far greater proportion of a year's salary on cars & in some markets a number of years salary on a car. People buy cars with smaller engines & payback periods are longer. People keep their cars for longer. Fuel price constrains mileage etc. Vehicles retain value far better than the US. Many people don't own cars & use public transport.
!!!And oh shouldnt this thread be in the W205 Section which i just noticed was started today !?!
Last edited by omgitselaine; Dec 18, 2013 at 01:51 PM. Reason: Spelling?
!?!? Inside and out it looks much better so im sure these will sell like hotcakes as well !
























