Depends what type of van it is and what you’re part-exing against, mine is a Feb 17 Westfalia from-new conversion and in a moment of weakness 2 weeks ago when I’d had enough of my stupid locks I enquired about chopping it in for a larger pvc Campervan and was stunned to be offered only £4.5k less than I paid for it and the salesman said he could have got on the phone and found a buyer the same day!
While I didn’t get an official valuation, a year after we bought our Cali it was worth more than we paid for it; thanks to 11% of price rises since we bought it and the rather epic discount we got. I’ve seen high spec Highlines for sale recently for more than we paid.
Could probably still get not far off what we paid for it today.
However what tends to happen is that you decide to sell it at the wrong time and get offered about £10.
While the hit we took on our last Cali wasn’t too awful, it was still an £11k drop in 3.5 years and that was super low miles and utterly mint condition; I was offered far far less from a local main dealer too.
VW vans hang onto their value well in general but I find it’s often circumstance that dictates price rather than some book value.
Let’s also not forget that a year ago it felt like diesels cards were marked; suddenly they were out of vogue; in fact it sounds like there’s another scandal affecting T6s now.
What the petrols win on by miles is drivaeability but also the lack of “short journey”
guilt which is often hidden from diesel ownership stories.
Been whizzing around in ours doing house stuff (actually using it as a van!); short journeys but enough to heat up the emissions crap they come with. Journey length shouldn’t be an issue but it is.
Oh and that flat spot in power at 2800rpm is winding me up.
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