how much is a survivor 67 fastback worth?

DarkoStoj

Founding Member
Sep 4, 2002
929
13
39
Detroit
well I have the chance to buy an original 67 mustang fastback, but its not cheap at all. This car is ORIGINAL...I mean the way this car rolled off the line in 67 is the same way it is now. Its not perfect, but its pretty damn close.

The only things changed on the car was a brand new flowmaster exhaust put on the car, 18" torque thrust II's, and new shocks. The current owner changed those parts all out last year, and still has the original exhaust, wheels/tires, and shocks that go with the car. Its a C code 289 2 barrel with an automatic trans...the motor has never been apart, still has the original intake/carb/valvecovers/airfilter, and the motor runs perfect. The car is fully optioned with a/c (still charged), power steering, power disc brakes, deluxe interior, tilt away column, fold down seat, console, and i'm sure other options i'm forgetting about. The car has the original Wimbledon white paint with original parchment interior. Body is perfect with no rust, and still has the clean original undercoating on the underbody. I know the market for these cars has dipped in the past couple years, so I don't want to have all this money into one of these cars that I cant get out....but i've never even seen or heard of a car this original before so i'm really leaning towards picking it up. Just wondering how much is too much to pay for one of these?
 
That is an amazing find. While it might be worth a lot, the problem is who all wants that original of a car? I would be afraid to drive the thing on the road for damaging its value.

I think it is worth a lot. BUT, the number of people who would want to buy such a car (at its actual value) is very small.

Aka, if you feel you might ever need to dump it for cash, don't buy it because it will take you months/years to find "the right" buyer for its actual value.

To add to that... if you do buy it... don't you dare sell it for less than its actual value because the person getting the deal might change something on it because they didn't pay enough not too.
 
i also forgot to mention its also got the window sticker, 54,000 documented original miles (all 4 copies of the titles from ownership changes are there), there is even an original bill of sale that shows the car cost $4200 if I remember right and the guy who got it did a trade in on his green 63ish oldsmobile sedan :nice:
 
a survivor c-code 67 fastback with 54,000 miles is probably worth in the $15-20K range, maybe slightly more or slightly less depending on overall condition and curb appeal

I am in the rust belt... so I would be happy to buy ANY fastback in this condition in that price range.

I am going to have to disagree with that price range... or point back to my comment on finding "the right" buyer for resale.
 
yes prices have dropped considerably because of the economy as of late. i too have been trying to sell my car but the market is just way down right now. i'll probably sit on my car a while and just drive it until the market comes back some