Friday, September 23, 2011

How much do porsche cars sell for?

How much do porsche cars sell for?|||http://www.pistonheads.com/sales/index.a鈥?/a>





Whole list on this site hope it helps.|||A wide range... if you check local classifieds and are not picky about condition, you can probably find some early 70s 914s running for less than $1k. Good chance at finding some of the first 924s around that range as well.





Other rare models will fetch much more... a genuine lightweight 1973 911RS will generally fetch close to $200k at auction, and cars like Donohue's 917/30 or Le Mans winners and such would go in the millions. Even a typical run of the mill 962 lacking any significant history would command around $300k.





Among new cars, the 987 Porsche Boxster would be the least expensive offering, with a price tag around $40k. An RS Spyder would be the most expensive, with a price tag of $1.5 Million (although, that does include 4 engineers).|||Depends on what kind. But for the most part, you can't afford it on a McDonalds salary....Or even a teacher's salary...Or a veterinarian. Although, I do plan on gettting one when I get my veterinary business all up and running in years to come.|||It is completely dependent but most Porsche's hold their value and sell for more than your average car.


An old 356 will go in the $25k + range, a Boxster depending on milage will go from between $11k-60k, a new 911 will go for about $40k-$80k, and older 911's sell in the $25k-$40k range. Then there are the 944, and 928 that can be found between $1k-25k.|||You also want to think, how much is it going to cost to maintain to drive. The cost of the vehicle is just the start, especially in high performance cars. You have simple costs as gas/oil/tires/brakes. Then you have regular maintenance and then there is unscheduled maintenance, and of course there is insurance.|||from $80,000 and up|||depends on the model, year...etc





surf on www.cars.com





you should find what you are looking for...|||There are different porsches the big ones are like 60,000 to 70,000. the small ones are 70,000 to 150,000 or more.|||a lot|||It depends on the model.


Cabriolet=Convertible


4=All wheel drive


S=Special or Sport


RS=Rally Sport


Porsche Boxster $45,800


Porsche Boxster S $55,700


Porsche Cayman $49,400


Porsche Cayman S $59,100


Porsche 911 Carrera $73,500


Porsche 911 Carrera S $83,800


Porsche 911 Carrera Cabriolet $83,800


Porsche 911 Carrera S Cabriolet $94,100


Porsche 911 Carrera 4 $79,400


Porsche 911 Carrera 4s $89,700


Porsche 911 Carrera 4 Cabriolet $89,700


Porsche 911 Carrera 4s Cabriolet $100,000


Porsche 911 Targa 4 $87,000


Porsche 911 Targa 4s $97,300


Porsche 911 Turbo $126,200


Porsche 911 Turbo Cabriolet $136,500


Porsche 911 GT2 $191,700


Porsche 911 GT3 $107,500


Porsche 911 GT3 RS $124,900


Porsche Cayenne $43,400


Porsche Cayenne S $57,900


Porsche Cayenne Turbo $93,700


2004-2006 Porsche Carrera GT $410,000|||Tax %26amp; Title and that adds up to the car payments...





I would say a very high TCO (Total Cost of Ownership). There is a limit on how much you can borrow from a bank. I think is 60,000 and above you have to come with some cash to cover the difference. I would say, no bank will finance $100,000 car for 6 years :-))|||Depends, the 911 can go from $80,000 to over $100,000. Its all depends on the model and generation/year. The 993 Porsches can sell for quite a bit. Anything from 996 on wont be worth as much to collectors. The 996 generation and the generations after that are not as popular as the 993,964 and the classic 911 because of shape and motor.

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