NADA Collector Vehicle Value Guide
Often I read where people ask what a vehicle is worth. And the comments vary from civil to well....
Here is the Web link you can use: http://www.nadaguides.com/SectionHom...=22&p=0&f=5003 |
Unfortunately, NADA Guides is highly inaccurate in my experience, and I'm in the business. Their values are nowhere near what I see buying and selling for in the real world marketplace.
I find them all to be behind the curve by several months, but CPI tends to be less so than most. And forget Old Car Trader. That thing isn't worth the match to burn it to ashes. Totally worthless. |
I read two counterpoints but no solutionss or references to guide potential buyers/sellers in the "right" direction. Being 'in the business' what are the altermatives? Craigslist, eBay, Corvette Forum?
NADA is merely just what it says it is, a guide. Barrett-Jackson is certainly not the bechmark by which values are to be established. Nor are car dealers with inflated prices and less than honest descriptions. |
I been really looking also the last several months and have used that site to compair prices out their. NADA seems to be 15 to 25% higher than market price the last couple months.
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I don't think N.A.D.A. is an accurate guide at all, and neithe is the Old Car Price Guide. I think you have to do a comparison on what they are actually selling for TODAY and in TODAYS MARKET then decide if its worth it to you. I wouldnt go by any asking price either, try to find out an actual price the car sold for. There seems to be so many factors that can make an individual car worth 5K more than another of the same year. It has to be close to the others but it can still fluctuate.
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Mannheim
:iagree: NADA guides is whack on the high side for everything! Maybe they base their guide on asking price rather than actual sales price.
I don't know about other cars, but this guide has been closest to what I feel the actual value of the C3's is, assuming critical numbers match... http://www.manheimgold.com/ |
The Manheimgold appears reasonable.
NADA has been formulated by crack heads dreaming of the big score. |
I think prices are too high on Manheimgold too. I looked up prices on a 1969 Plymouth Roadrunner, and they seem way off to me. Anyone paying $52K (Show) or $44K (Excelent) for a base model Roadrunner is crazy. Even muscle car dealers near me sell excellent cars for $30K. And they also have Hemi and 440 6-Packs selling for almost identical prices.
I looked up 1969 Corvette, and it seemed fairly close. |
Originally Posted by wolfemc
(Post 1565389763)
:iagree: NADA guides is whack on the high side for everything! Maybe they base their guide on asking price rather than actual sales price.
I don't know about other cars, but this guide has been closest to what I feel the actual value of the C3's is, assuming critical numbers match... http://www.manheimgold.com/ |
What are you talking about? Do a search for a 1971 LT-1 with air. Evidently it was a super rare car for $47K in excelent condition! ;)
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Not only is NADA generally too high but its option lists are wrong. You can select options that did not exist and options that did exist often add value incorrectly. Here's an example: For 1965 coupe NADA adds 30% for a 327 engine. There were 4 different 327s in 65, including the 250hp base. They can't alll be worth 30% more.
Some price guides are better than others, but they are all flawed to some degree. IMO it is very difficult to make a guide for classic cars, particularly corvettes, because there are relatively so few on the market and so few buyers at any given time. Prices can vary greatly based on options, condition, documentation, history, even color. I'd stay away from guides like NADA and use corvette or classic car specific guides. I agree with NMT1957. You have to watch the market with the assets available to you and make your own judgement. |
If I can get NADA for my vette.....I'll sell in a New York second! :cheers:
Anyone? Anyone? Buehler? |
Originally Posted by Grimlock
(Post 1565392619)
What are you talking about? Do a search for a 1971 LT-1 with air. Evidently it was a super rare car for $47K in excelent condition! ;)
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Originally Posted by ed427vette
(Post 1565393967)
1971 LT1 with air would be not only rare but non existant from the factory.
Yeah that was the joke. But if you go on their site, they list the LT-1 Specifically in 1971 and show Air as a $2K add-on to LT-1 cars. 1971 CHEVY/CORVETTE LT1 Dsp/HP Eng Fair Good Exc Show Loan CONVERTIBLE 350/330 V8 15,500 28,500 49,000 55,000 S 25,500 COUPE T TOP 350/330 V8 12,500 23,000 40,000 45,000 S 21,000 Add: AC $2k |
Originally Posted by ss396t6
(Post 1565386947)
I read two counterpoints but no solutionss or references to guide potential buyers/sellers in the "right" direction. Being 'in the business' what are the altermatives? Craigslist, eBay, Corvette Forum?
NADA is merely just what it says it is, a guide. Barrett-Jackson is certainly not the bechmark by which values are to be established. Nor are car dealers with inflated prices and less than honest descriptions. |
NADA lost their credibility. Just look at the economy and the facts. They must have a special interest. I see deals everywhere in the real world.
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I put this same post in the C-1 Cars For Sale section and there was a lot less criticism/comments. However, I copied my response on the C-1site here is the copy of my response:
Counterpoint: First of all it's just a guide, not the gospel of all Corvette pricing. You do make some valid points. This guide is used primarily by lending insitutions such as banks and car dealers so that a person who is in the market for a Corvette, for example, will likely get a loan. Let's say that someone is in the market for a '63 Corvette Fuelie convertible and the asking price is say $70K. The potential buyer, who is drooling, takes photos, gets documentation, and gets it appraised at $80K. The potential buyer takes all this information to the bank to get a loan and the loan officer refers to that NADA book. He/she sees that low book is $86K. Well, to the loan officer he/she sees that as a valid reason to process the loan because the asking price is $70K, appraisal is $80K, and the Corvette's low book value is $86K. [The potential buyer is now a happy Corvette owner] I definitely would not use this book to base all Corvette pricing nor would I use Barrett-Jackson auctions. In my opinion the best pricing guide is what you find in the completed sections of eBay on those sold. You can draw your talons back and retract the venomous fangs. It's just a guide, Forum readers. Like the Kelley Blue Book. If there weren't these guides around and all market prices on collector vehicles were based on all our subjective opinions there would be pricing all over the map and most of us collector vehicle owners wouldn't like that, either. |
NADA is a useless guide...low retail is a dream price!
'71 LS5 Conv. both tops, A/C Low retail Avg. retail High retail $38,425 :eek: $65,040 :rofl: $102,140:willy: Manheimgold might be a little closer in some parts of the U.S. 1971 CHEVY/CORVETTE LS5 454 4sp/HP Eng CONVERTIBLE 454/365 V8 Fair Good Exc Show Loan $15,000 $27,500 $48,000 $54,000 $25,000 |
Manheimgold might be a little closer in some parts of the U.S.
1971 CHEVY/CORVETTE LS5 454 4sp/HP Eng CONVERTIBLE 454/365 V8 Fair Good Exc Show Loan $15,000 $27,500 $48,000 $54,000 $25,000 That's about right. Mine is somewhere between Good and Excellent. It has AC, power, two tops, etc. Mechanically rebuilt front to rear three years ago and driven less than 1000 miles since. |
Originally Posted by ss396t6
(Post 1565411663)
Manheimgold might be a little closer in some parts of the U.S.
1971 CHEVY/CORVETTE LS5 454 4sp/HP Eng CONVERTIBLE 454/365 V8 Fair Good Exc Show Loan $15,000 $27,500 $48,000 $54,000 $25,000 That's about right. Mine is somewhere between Good and Excellent. It has AC, power, two tops, etc. Mechanically rebuilt front to rear three years ago and driven less than 1000 miles since. |
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