996 TT Prices
Author
Discussion

turboguru

Original Poster:

448 posts

257 months

Tuesday 14th June 2005
quotequote all
Being a 996 TT owner I am concerned with the prices seeming to have dropped quite a bit recently. Like every 911 turbo there has to be a bottoming out price somewhere regardless of milage up to say 100k so where do you reakon this price would sit? it has to be above all other models surely apart from the GT2? what are your thoughts?

dunnred7

274 posts

258 months

Tuesday 14th June 2005
quotequote all
Prices have only dropped temporarily and BECAUSE I BLOODY WELL BOUGHT ONE !!

(oh well, its only money !!)

t urbo

218 posts

289 months

Tuesday 14th June 2005
quotequote all
Try not to think about it, it will destroy you.
I paid 104k for mine 20 months ago and i reckon its value now with 10k on the clock is around £ 65-68k at best.Thats 20k per year!

DanH

12,287 posts

287 months

Tuesday 14th June 2005
quotequote all

Its hard to know how far they will fall, theres the new car coming soon, and they sold so many turbos who knows if they will go into even further over supply. Pretty much all high end cars seem to be loosing money hand over fist at the moment. Who'd have thought OPCs would have GT2s up at 65k?

roshambo

580 posts

274 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Surely prices of the earlier cars (2000/2001) will bottom out at a healthy margin above the Carrera 2's/4's & C4S's? I mean you surely cannot have a situation where a Turbo is worth less than a C2 of similar age & mileage? Take t urbo’s example. That car CANNOT continue to lose 20k per year otherwise it will be worth 20k in 2 years time!! So sometime prices will level out and stabilise , I am interested to know when this might be.
Older C2’s have leveled out, clean average mileage 1998/9 cars seem to be holding around the £30k mark for over a year now. Certainly I sold my 1998 C2 over a year ago for £30k & turboguru could have got £30k for his almost identical car when he sold his just a couple of months ago.
I do hope they level out otherwise you will have boy racers driving around in them giving us all a bad name soon as they will be so cheap to buy, then skimping on servicing & running costs & not looking after them as they are so expensive to run…..just like what happened with the Subaru Impreza’s!

DaGinge

6,740 posts

276 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
If you look at 993 prices the TT has settled around £15K more than a C2 - so probably around the same margin (eventually).

Deep

2,534 posts

270 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
This is one of the reasons I'm looking into buying a used tt. Early cars now can be had for £50-£55k. I cannot imagine these cars being worth only £25k in 2-3 years. So in the relative terms of cars its a good investment. Not many supercars that will lose less than £10k a year.

Thats the theory anyway....

simonharrod911

6,792 posts

259 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Does anyone think the 996 will be the first turbocharged 911 to drop below the previous model in value?

robbom3

265 posts

254 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Having just bought a 996tt, I guess I've benefited significantly from the prices being a bit soft at the moment (2003 car, with excellent spec for £66.5k). I looked at the prices of late, low mileage 993 turbos, which can still demand £45k+, and based on that I hope that the 996tt will stabilise.

Having said that, I learned a long time ago, that the only way to make a small fortune owning sports cars, is to start with a large fortune !!!!

cuneus

5,963 posts

269 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
"Older C2’s have leveled out, clean average mileage 1998/9 cars seem to be holding around the £30k mark for over a year now"

A few on PH are late 20's

DanH

12,287 posts

287 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all

yep I'm not convinced tha think C2s have leveled out yet either.

There are a lot more 996TTs than 993TTs, and remember the contrary view to the 993 versions supporting the 996 iteration is that the 996 will simply push down the 993 too.

Given Porsche seems kean to shift high volumes these days, I don't think residuals are ever going to be that bullet proof, especially as they've broadened the appeal to so many people.

cuneus

5,963 posts

269 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
"especially as they've broadened the appeal to so many people"

Thinking of a truck then ?

Laingy

676 posts

268 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Very rare that cars cost level out, the depreciation slows but the costs of ownership increase. But cars always continue to depreciate unless demand exceeds supply, which in the case of the 996 will never happen because porsche made so many of them.

Deep

2,534 posts

270 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Even if a C2 now costs late 20s thats not bad is it? How much did they cost new £55k? Thats more than 50% of value retained after 5 years. Not many cars can match that

wini

213 posts

267 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
I'm thinking of trading my 993tt for a 996tt The 996tts do seem to be dropping price very quickly! I think the reason why is there are loads and loads of 996tt's for sale on the adds.Does antone know a rough figure of how many RHD 996tt's have been made?

DanH

12,287 posts

287 months

Wednesday 15th June 2005
quotequote all
Laingy said:
Very rare that cars cost level out, the depreciation slows but the costs of ownership increase. But cars always continue to depreciate unless demand exceeds supply, which in the case of the 996 will never happen because porsche made so many of them.


The cost of ownership is the part people so frequently forget. My friend just bought a depreciation proof 3.3 turbo. Its so far cost him 3 and a bit grand on maintenance and needs new damping all round.

turboguru

Original Poster:

448 posts

257 months

Thursday 16th June 2005
quotequote all
cheers for all your feedback guys, I have decided sod it! its such a great car and I really enjoy it I am just going to run it for another couple of years and forget about it all - I fail to see them ever going much past 45k based on market trends and whatever it eneds up being worth it doesnt change the fact its the most usable supercar and lovely to drive.

Marquis_Rex

7,377 posts

266 months

Saturday 18th June 2005
quotequote all
simonharrod911 said:
Does anyone think the 996 will be the first turbocharged 911 to drop below the previous model in value?

I think they MIGHT drop lower than the previous model a bit. Apart from the odd deviant the 993 TT value are almost stagnant.
However there MUST be a limit. It's such a competent, robust superbly fast all rounder. There's no known big mechanical issues on these cars I know of ( I don't know if RMS effects these) I mean, £25 K- NO way, alate 1989 5 speed 930 Turbo LE goes for that much and has done for a while.....

Marquis_Rex

7,377 posts

266 months

Saturday 18th June 2005
quotequote all
DanH said:

Laingy said:
Very rare that cars cost level out, the depreciation slows but the costs of ownership increase. But cars always continue to depreciate unless demand exceeds supply, which in the case of the 996 will never happen because porsche made so many of them.



The cost of ownership is the part people so frequently forget. My friend just bought a depreciation proof 3.3 turbo. Its so far cost him 3 and a bit grand on maintenance and needs new damping all round.

I agree, however the 3.3 litre 930 shape Turbos have always seemed to fetch values very similar to the naturally aspirated cousins. Compare this to 993 vs 993tt- where it's not the case. I reckon it's due, in part, to less difference in running costs between the two variants and the much bigger chasm in abilities and performance....

DaGinge

6,740 posts

276 months

Saturday 18th June 2005
quotequote all
Marquis_Rex said:

There's no known big mechanical issues on these cars I know of ( I don't know if RMS effects these)


RMS doesn't affect turbos,GT2s or GT3s because they have an entirely different engine...and a superb one at that. You are correct that there are no common mechanical issues with these cars.