Monday, February 13, 2012

How much for a 1984 Audi 5000s Turbo?

It is in good condition. I think the miles are over 100,000 though. It was actually driven by the representatives for Adidas in the olympics. The olympics gives out cars for sponsors or whoever to drive back and forth from the games to where they stay, and this olympic edition is number 56 of 100 made. It doesn't seem like the car itself is super valuable, but I was wondering how much money the historical value translates into. Not that I am planning on selling it, but I was just curious if anyone could give me a reasonable guesstimate.How much for a 1984 Audi 5000s Turbo?Normally practically nothing - an '84 with over 100k miles is a couple of hundred bucks at best, if that.



The Olympic thing is the only kicker, as you've noticed. Since you know exactly which number it was, it probably would be of value mainly if you can identify which athlete was in it and then preferably a famous one. If you can document that part, you could perhaps squeeze some extra bucks out of it. Other than that, I don't think it would add much unless it was specially painted with Olympic logos or whatever, where for curiousity someone might shell out $1000 or so.



Good luck!How much for a 1984 Audi 5000s Turbo?Historical value is not worth a lot .How much for a 1984 Audi 5000s Turbo?not orth much very cheap and affordableHow much for a 1984 Audi 5000s Turbo?
Sorry, practically worthless and will never, ever, ever be worth anything. Why is that? Because a) nobody cares about Audi 5000s, and nobody cares about the Olympics of 20+ years ago.



Best thing to do is enjoy your car, use it up and that's it. It's a nice driving car, I used to own one myself...but it has a pretty bad reputation.



As a consolation, no old German sedans from the 80s are worth very much either. People are afraid of the repair costs, and you can't blame 'em for shying away from cars like this.



Having said all this, if it were a Turbo Quattro wagon, it would be worth a lot more.
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