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I have a 1995 Mercury Cougar, that has issues. It needs a new battery, and will not even start. I believe that it needs a new transmission (it will not go over 37 mph), and new tires. It has a brand new alternator and brake pads. Power everything, and a tape player. It has been sitting in my driveway because the transmission, and also, some idiot broke into it, and left a light on, completely killing the battery. Today, a man asked if it was for sale. I definately want to get rid of it, but I do not know what a fair price is to ask for it. Thanks!

2006-11-09 07:12:08 · 10 answers · asked by Anonymous in Cars & Transportation Buying & Selling

10 answers

The fair price of any Mercury should be no more than $15 to $20 dollars with the gas tank full. If its empty is no worth it.

2006-11-09 07:16:13 · answer #1 · answered by F V 4 · 1 0

what is the blue book value of 1995 Mercury Cougar in excellent condition v8 engine

2015-02-18 10:20:00 · answer #2 · answered by sheila 1 · 0 0

Kelly Blue Book for a 1995 Mercury Cougar XR-7 Coupe 2D in excellent condition is $4,135.00

2006-11-09 07:22:49 · answer #3 · answered by Janette 6 · 1 0

Using http://www.kbb.com
Assuming V6 and 92000 miles

I see
Excellent $2,635

Good $2,295

Fair $1,925

But your car sounds like it is in "poor" condition, so I would ask 1,925 minus the amount of money you think will have to be spent to get it to Fair condition.

Fair" condition means that the vehicle has some mechanical or cosmetic defects and needs servicing but is still in reasonable running condition. This vehicle has a clean title history, the paint, body and/or interior need work performed by a professional. The tires may need to be replaced. There may be some repairable rust damage.
Poor

"Poor" condition means that the vehicle has severe mechanical and/or cosmetic defects and is in poor running condition. The vehicle may have problems that cannot be readily fixed such as a damaged frame or a rusted-through body. A vehicle with a branded title (salvage, flood, etc.) or unsubstantiated mileage is considered "poor." A vehicle in poor condition may require an independent appraisal to determine its value. Kelley Blue Book does not attempt to report a value on a "poor" vehicle because the value of cars in this category varies greatly.

2006-11-09 07:23:23 · answer #4 · answered by DanE 7 · 0 0

Alright in kelly it says for ALL vehicles that are in poor condition that there is no value. This is because no one wants a car that does not run. True trade in on that car is going to be a dollar. They might show you a thousand but true value is a buck.

2006-11-10 02:15:05 · answer #5 · answered by cargrl 3 · 0 0

Check out that blue book site. God be with you, my 94 Cougar had some severe issues too...after ONE year.

2006-11-09 07:17:44 · answer #6 · answered by chefgrille 7 · 0 0

your looking at $1 to $2000.00 dollars to fix the trans maybe and new tires i would put maybe $1000.00 or best offer on it and see what you can get for it and it is a 95 that's kind of old in car standards

2006-11-09 07:20:53 · answer #7 · answered by Derbygirl33 1 · 0 0

Sounds like a $500.00 car to me in the present condition.

2006-11-09 09:07:47 · answer #8 · answered by SKYDOGSLIM 6 · 0 0

you can go to kbb.com (kelly blue book). it said around 1900, but that was for fair condition with 100,000miles and in my zip code area... you can go there and put in exactly your info and find out what to ask for...

2006-11-09 07:18:12 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 2 0

go on line to Kelley blue book and look it up , we don't know what are all your standards acc. or

2006-11-09 07:20:11 · answer #10 · answered by George H 2 · 0 0

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