Fair price for a 2003 E 500
It's likely that the best you'll see in a private sale right now is something less than 30 grand. For the tax benefits the 28k may be your best choice, 2003 E500's aren't exactly flying off the lot.
Last edited by sklasse; Nov 30, 2006 at 09:38 PM.
I think the group has an interesting observation about the worthiness of 28, especially from a dealer, who in all likelihood would normally have quoted you 22 or 23k.
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But the thing about private party, you need to be able to facilitate the sale to your prospective buyers. Find how you can offer them financing. Capital One has a blank check for example. I would of bought your car for those 29k Quick, Especially with the mileage it has.
Numbers from KBB.. and you know the dealership does not offer trade in... more like wholesale/trade in...
Trade In
Condition Value
Excellent
$27,500
Good
$26,090
Fair
$23,670
RETAIL IS LISTED
Condition Value
Excellent
$36,465
Of course, sell it for the most amount you can get. I have also found it is just easier to trade it. If you have the time and can wait... try private sale.
This time I went with a lease... NO TRADES... hahaah
Last edited by nantucketsleigh; Dec 1, 2006 at 11:53 AM.
Options really don't get you any money at trade in time except for Comand w/Nav.
Usually, your 1st offer is your best offer... & remember when you trade your car in, you pay less sales tax on the new one because the Sales Price is less. (NYState), so figure in the additional sales tax if you sell privately. Also when you trade, there is no chance of you being defrauded out of your car, money or both.
I'm afraid its finally getting to the point where leasing will make sense for everyone.
just a rough estimation I am not trying to be exactly
i read on bmwusa.com 4 years ago that more than 60% of their new cars are leased, not financed. i bet that number is higher now among all luxury cars.
problem is that when these low mileage, 3-4 year old used cars come off the lease and flood the used car market, that'll drive down the already pitiful used car values on MBs and BMWs even lower.
Things are different when you buy a car & keep it for 6-8 years... but I know I wouldnt keep any car that long. An old Luxury car is still an old car. Period. I don't want an old car. Not if new ones are so cheap monthly.
But tell me... where are these 3-4 year old off lease cars going? By the time the dealer preps them & CPOs them, they are not cheap anymore. New lease deals make buying them a questionable decision. So where do these cars go?
Last edited by Barry45RPM; Dec 1, 2006 at 02:19 PM.
seems to me, though after that aren't going any where or at least not flying off the shelfs if you know what i mean.
Last edited by sklasse; Dec 1, 2006 at 04:08 PM.


I just rolled over my '04 for an '07 and asked my guy the same thing. The '04 was off a 39 mo. lease with only 22K miles and I would have been happy to buy it but $38K buyout wasn't enticing. He said they (the dealer) would have to pay corporate the $38K buyout so there was nothing in it for them. They just put in on a transport and ship it back to MB. Corporate goes through it and send it back out to auction (some kind of preferred network I presume).
It's the only way that makes sense. Corporate is the only one who has any $'s to play with because of their net cost factor. Tag on a couple of points going back out the door and still give the used car dealer a little wiggle room on the retail side.
When you think about it, it's a perfect way to keep new cars streaming out of the showroom:
(1) As mentioned earlier, takes us out of the used car market and keeps a preferred reseller/buyer market happy.
(2) MB makes the lease payments very enticing as compared to buying, and they rollover a customer into another lease cycle who may very well have kept his original car.
Makes perfect sense from a marketing standpoint. I'm not so sure I will want to buy again, even though I'm perfectly happy with the car I'm turning in.
Last edited by crb49; Dec 3, 2006 at 04:47 PM.
1- getting driven under warranty
2- Resale values (regardless of the residual value they show u on contract, my a$$)
My '03 was the kind of car that would drive the value of a car way down. Looking at a printout of the problems my car had... if you ran the VIN and printed it out at the dealer it would kill a tree it was so long.
Take the deal.
Last edited by lig; Dec 5, 2006 at 01:36 AM.



