Replacement for Coupe and Cabriolet


Date of change is not yet known.
The AMG GT just got refreshed, with a Black Series forthcoming, so replacement model is likely 2-3 years away. S Coupe may remain in production without substantive changes until then, but of course no one knows if production will continue beyond MY2020.
New SL will be released sooner so likely the S Cab will almost certainly be discontinued after MY2020. I'm very interested in seeing the next generation SL but it is widely expected to be a 2+2 (i.e. very small rear seats) and soft top - neither of which appeal to me.
Those interested in a front engine 2+2 coupe, which seems to be a niche that Mercedes is abandoning, should check out the new Ferrari Roma. It think it looks amazing - excellent V8 biturbo from 488 up front, rear 8sp dual clutch transaxle from SF90 in the rear, new digital interior, and great styling. It will probably in the low-mid $200k range but doubt deliveries will begin before until 2021 at least. I am no Ferrari fan boy and have never owned one, but I think this car will be much more desirable than anything from AMG, Aston, or Porsche.


This should be the end of large, comfortable cruisers.
I am hoping that when production ceases on these large versions that the resale value will begin to increase.
Ron
The AMG GT just got refreshed, with a Black Series forthcoming, so replacement model is likely 2-3 years away. S Coupe may remain in production without substantive changes until then, but of course no one knows if production will continue beyond MY2020.
New SL will be released sooner so likely the S Cab will almost certainly be discontinued after MY2020. I'm very interested in seeing the next generation SL but it is widely expected to be a 2+2 (i.e. very small rear seats) and soft top - neither of which appeal to me.
Those interested in a front engine 2+2 coupe, which seems to be a niche that Mercedes is abandoning, should check out the new Ferrari Roma. It think it looks amazing - excellent V8 biturbo from 488 up front, rear 8sp dual clutch transaxle from SF90 in the rear, new digital interior, and great styling. It will probably in the low-mid $200k range but doubt deliveries will begin before until 2021 at least. I am no Ferrari fan boy and have never owned one, but I think this car will be much more desirable than anything from AMG, Aston, or Porsche.
This should be the end of large, comfortable cruisers.
I am hoping that when production ceases on these large versions that the resale value will begin to increase.
Ron
It won't increase for many years to come.
Agree about Roma, has some of the classic Ferrari design language and first 'affordable' Ferrari with their new interior/tech.





