2014 C7 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray Pricing Tipped at $71,860?
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Has the approximate price for the C7 Corvette Stingray Coupe been revealed GM's Win-A-Corvette-Sweepstakes?
The contest, which is officially run by GM, lists an approximate retail value of $82,610 (listed in the contest's official rules PDF) for the winning package. But, the rules specifically lists an Approximate Retail Value ("ARV") of $71,860 for the 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray. There's no indication whether the winner's C7 will include the Z51 performance package nor what other options/packages it will be equipped with, but this figure at least gives us a ballpark estimate of the C7 Corvette Stingray coupe's price range. Attachment 487459 Attachment 487597 |
i'm going to go ahead and call it now; a full optioned stingray sits at that price. time to save up that $72k!
//edit actually... reading the pdf regarding contest rules, this part specifically: "Winner is responsible for title, license, registration, dealer preparation costs, auto insurance and other fees associated with prize." ie tax is included as well as destination... unassumingly that they would fail safe the tax at the highest in the nation possible (10% in Birmingham, AL) http://taxes.about.com/od/statetaxes...and-lowest.htm that brings the cost down to ~$65,327. take off the usual $795 for destination and you come to possible MSRP of: $64,532... thoughts? |
It's for a fully loaded Z51 model.
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If you take a stock C6 at 50k plus the '...if you can afford a C6 you will be able to afford the C7...' delta at say 10% puts it at 55k. 4LT on the 2013 is 10k puts it at 65k Add the Z51 and Magnetic Ride probably does get you close. |
Where do I go to enter this:laugh:
price seems about right! Very surprised if that's fully loaded. I actually expected a little more. |
Ya maybe a fully loaded 3LT with the Z51 package will be around that price... If that's starting price I know a lot of people including myself will not be purchasing the C7 :(
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LMAO - come to think of it, a stripper with no options doesn't sound like much fun huh? :pound: (ducking tomatoes) |
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Many want a Kate Upton but won't complain at all if they settled with a Kaley Cuoco... :biggrin: (tomatoe tomato potatoe potato) |
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I'm hoping this is the case :thumbsup: They did say if you can afford the current vette then you'd be able to afford the new one! |
right now, the 'Vette I would price out is a GS, 2LT, NPP, mag shocks and add a transparent roof. MSRP = $60,800 + 6% Maryland state sales tax +$250 registration/title so call it $65K roughly. It's awfully hard to beat that, especially with the ridiculous discounting going on now (the mega dealers will probably do that for $49K right now). Even with a 10% increase, you're looking at one hell of a ride for $66K MSRP. Give it a year for some discounting to take place and I'm there. :happy0180:
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IMHO.... It might seem like a great price for the value (and it is)..... For those of us who are "baby boomers"....most will probably still get the C7--if they had planned on it in the first place.
However, touching 60K for a 2LT C7 is going to do just the opposite of what GM was trying to do.....lure the younger generations. Of course there will always be "x" % that can afford it, but if GM believes they can sell 30k cars at a starting price of 54k and up....I think they have greatly miscalculated. Especially in this economy with the cost of everything rising... I hope I'm wrong.... |
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Younger generations can't afford the current C6 anyways. The point was to appeal to younger buyers and get them interested in Chevrolet and GM again.
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