AM I asking to much?




Personally, without looking at your car, I would say $12K is bottom and $14K is top that I would be willing to offer. $16.5K? Nope. Not when I paid $18K for a car with fewer miles and was two model years newer than yours and that was 3 years ago.
Hold out if you want but you should peruse the used-car seller and car auction business sites. There are a crap-ton of used cars and off-lease cars (coming off lease) this summer. There is a huge backlog of unsold cars on dealer's lots. The amount of delinquent loans on cars (new and used) is at a record high and expected to increase. Personally, I've put cash away for another car later this year in anticipation of a serious price fall.
No one can force me to buy a car. I have to want to buy it. And I learned years ago to listen to my wallet and not my heart. Look how many recent sub-forum members have come on-board in the last year and they post about literally thousands of dollars in maintenance that had to be performed. Unless you want to continue to pay the maintenance costs (and I'm going to want to see the records if interested in buying your car), drop the price and sell the car to someone willing to deal with the maintenance required to own an E55.
Best of luck to you and I hope your car finds a good home.
Last edited by knvs; Jul 5, 2017 at 08:03 AM.
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Personally, without looking at your car, I would say $12K is bottom and $14K is top that I would be willing to offer. $16.5K? Nope. Not when I paid $18K for a car with fewer miles and was two model years newer than yours and that was 3 years ago.
Hold out if you want but you should peruse the used-car seller and car auction business sites. There are a crap-ton of used cars and off-lease cars (coming off lease) this summer. There is a huge backlog of unsold cars on dealer's lots. The amount of delinquent loans on cars (new and used) is at a record high and expected to increase. Personally, I've put cash away for another car later this year in anticipation of a serious price fall.
No one can force me to buy a car. I have to want to buy it. And I learned years ago to listen to my wallet and not my heart. Look how many recent sub-forum members have come on-board in the last year and they post about literally thousands of dollars in maintenance that had to be performed. Unless you want to continue to pay the maintenance costs (and I'm going to want to see the records if interested in buying your car), drop the price and sell the car to someone willing to deal with the maintenance required to own an E55.
Best of luck to you and I hope your car finds a good home.
Anybody who has any experience with AMG will know that an extra $3-4k at purchase can easily save you 5-7k in the next 12-18 months of ownership.
$15k is a reasonable price to settle for, for your car, OP. Because that mileage is rare, and if your car is kept well I don't see a reason you should charge less. Dealers will ask for about that much and you still have to pay all their stupid fees on top. If someone knows what they're looking for it's a good deal.
After buying my E55 from shady dealers who got it an an auction I'm never again gambling on AMG. Pay the money, get the car from a middle aged forum member who cares about their belongings- and call it a day.
The Best of Mercedes & AMG

1. Cheaper cars, or even cars that are priced in line with NADA, that have no real maintenance records, have been in serious accidents, have well over 100k miles, have been driven and modded by someone in their early 20s who probably beat the hell out of it, and/or have various dash lights on or other things broken
2. Exceptionally well taken care of E55's with stacks of maintenance from Day 1 to current that the owner is trying to get $3k-$5K (or more) above the highest NADA forecasts
It definitely seems like a seller's market right now if you're patient, but that's probably only to a point. The popularity of this car over the last couple of years probably is thanks in large part to all the articles and Youtube vids touting how much of a screaming deal it is (that's how I found out about it). $14k for a well-maintained sub-100k mile example is definitely an amazing deal, but once that number starts getting into the high teens or even 20's, the interest from folks like me drops exponentially. At the same time, I can't blame owners from trying to get what they can. Like I said, seller's market on these cars right now.
These cars are hard to find in good shape as I'm finding out with mine. I would have rather paid $20k for a perfect one than $14.5k for mine.

My cousin hunted for a month, I reviewed countless carfaxes and records.
He picked up a Capri Blue 2003 w/80K miles for $13,9xx it had been dealer maintained since new up until current mileage inclusive of tires. Near flawless car with a great service history and huge punch list of items. The only thing it has not had done yet is the fuel tank recall (filters/pumps were done as maintenance).
I even felt that price was a tad high, but we both knew he was paying for the verified maintenance history. His purchase took place over the weekend after July 4th.
Just wait for the right buy to come around.
As a comp, I bought mine 04 a year ago for 15k, 59k miles, excellent condition

As for the prices, a simple lookup on Nadaguide.com yields a max of about 14.5k and that's retail. Private party never seems to sell for retail because the dealers usually offer at least a 30 day warranty and do minor fixes to the car. People are posting that they paid less for newer cars or ones with lower mileage or ones from dealers. The answer seems obvious but lots of people ask for advice and never take it. The longer you wait, the more it depreciates.







