GTR PRO Available No markup
First come first serve basis with this car. Money in house or contract signed, no deposits. If you are interested / need payments ran please email, text, or call.
Steven Roumeliotis
240 818 4249
sroumeliotis@eurogermantown.com
Link to more Pictures
Code Description Price
MODEL: 2020 GTR $162,900
297 designo Selenite Grey Magno $3,950
621 Black Nappa/DINAMICA Exclusive with Silver Contrast Stitching
Options
DA1 DA1 Convenience Package: KEYLESS-GO®, Power-Folding Mirrors, $1,300
889 KEYLESS-GO
500 Power Folding Mirrors 249 Autodimming Mirrors 232 Garage Door Opener P49 Mirror Package
P17 KEYLESS-GO
DA7. DA7 Lane Tracking Package: Blind Spot Assist, Lane Keeping Assist $875
476 Lane Keeping Assist 234 Blind Spot Assist
22P Lane Tracking package
DB1. DB1 Exclusive Interior Package: Exclusive Nappa/DINAMICA Interior, $3,600
877 Extended Interior Lighting 61U Black DINAMICA Headliner
DV2DV2 GT R PRO: Exclusive Carbon Fiber Roof Design, Larger Front $22,950
773 AMG Carbon Fiber Exterior Package 5U9 Crossbar - Carbon Fiber - Matte 478 Coilover suspension
U99 Carbon Fiber Rear Fixed Wing PAP GT R PRO
B28 Carbon Fiber Side Mirror Housings
B07 AMG High-Performance Ceramic Composite Braking System $8,950
B29. AMG Carbon Fiber Door Sill Panels $1,200
H77 AMG Carbon Fiber Trim - Matte $3,150
RXE 19"/20" AMG Performance Forged Twin 5-Spoke, Grey $1,700
U15 GT R PRO Stripes
Y04 Silver Seat Belts. $500
239. Active Distance Assist DISTRONIC® $2,250
446 Touchpad
71B Hi-Vis Vest Driver and Passenger
735 Exclusive Interior Trim
811. Burmester® High-End Surround Sound System $4,500
GASGAS GUZZLER. $1,000
SUBTOTAL $217,825
DESTINATION &DELIVERY $995
TOTAL $219,820
*Pricing is subject to change. Mercedes-Benz reserves the right to make changes without notification.




As with others' responses to posters saying they they're worried about resale in light of the upcoming Black Series or 2021/2 refresh, I would think that the PRO would be a great car to own and drive now particularly if he/she plans to track it. I agree with others that the PRO, even if rarely driven, will hold it's value about the same as "regular GT Rs" percentagewise especially out a few years. As others pointed out on another thread here, after a while it's all about condition and desirability of the spec.
I saw the PRO at the LA auto show about a year ago and got on the list at my "we're-the-largest-in-North-America" dealership near my home in SoCal. I was one of three who would likely get a car. The GM met with each of us to review our intended specs (mine was very close if not the same to Shahul's and Steve's). They wanted to make sure that they weren't stuck with weird car if the buyer walked. They were clear that there would be an ADM "depending on the market at time of delivery" but when I later learned that they had turned down someone who offered $100,000 over MSRP, I took my name off the list. I also realized that I wouldn't track the car enough, if at all, to warrant the track-oriented suspension adjustments and aero bits.
Before we were thinking of the move from SoCal to VA, I had thought about buying a GT R or C as garage mate to our '18 GT3 and as the replacement for the DB11. I had started to talk to Shahul about buying from their store but then we moved to VA where we'll need a winter car. The day that we were at the dealership, Shahul and Steve had just taken delivery on a number of AMG 63 vehicles - S Class Coupes, E-wagons, some other AMG coupes and maybe a G63-Wagen. Some had already been shipped all over the U.S., and they are prepared to ship the PRO, as well.
I thought Benzbell did an excellent comparison between his former AMG GT R and the 911 GT3 RS. I, too, miss my GT S but not enough that I would trade the GT3 for one instead of the DB11. Prior to our current cars, my wife and I took turns daily driving the '16 AMG GT S and a '15 911 Turbo S. When driving one, I never missed the other, but was always excited to get into the other car for that experience. Most readers on the forum can understand why each car is special in its own way.
If anyone has read this far, let me digress and vent. It galls me that some dealers in areas like SoCal where there are a lot of high-rollers who want to brag that they paid $100K over for the first GT R PRO or the first G63, have the opportunity to charge crazy ADMs that drop to the bottom line as pure profit. Dealers in the same region that choose not to charge ridiculous ADMs or that don't have the $$$$ customer base to charge ADMs or if that choose to take care of their enthusiast customers cannot possibly compete for better bottom-line results and as a result likely don't get the best allocations. I'm a big believer in dealer/sales loyalty and my non-ADM GT3 with a last-minute allocation reinforced my loyalty to my Porsche dealer. Another bottom line: somebody buy this car, track it and post about it. BTW, lack of an ADM is probably a good hedge against part of the depreciation.
I’m kidding of course, and agree that Shalul deserves this car sold ASAP. Anyone wanting a perfect spec ‘Pro’ at MSRP would be nuts not to buy this car.
Bish
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