SOLD on Jun 26, 2026
Elite Dealer

1987 Buick Regal

Indiana

$8,900

1987 Buick Regal

Vehicle Details

Make

Buick

Model

Regal

Year

1987

VIN

KMR0417MP

Body Type

Hardtop

Description

1987 Buick Regal Roller, Comes with 496 engine OUT of car that needs to be rebuilt. • Big Block–Ready Setup • Big block cylinder heads • Complete serpentine system for big block applications Suspension & Drivetrain • UMI 3.5 suspension setup • Moser rear end with 4.11 gears • Turbo 400 transmission Fuel, Cooling & Power • Holley Sniper EFI system (supports up to 800 hp) • Electric fuel pump (800 hp capable) • High‑capacity radiator (800 hp capable) • Optima battery Extras • Vintage Air A/C system • Mickey Thompson tires Engine Note It previously had a 496ci big block making 610 hp and 644 lb‑ft, but the pistons failed and the engine has been removed. Body Style: Hardtop
Doors: 2

Buick Regal Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1973–1987
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Buick Regal Grand National and GNX are legends of the turbocharged 1980s — cars that humiliated Ferraris at stoplights and proved that American engineering could match European performance on its own terms. But the Regal's story is richer than just the performance variants.
This guide covers
8-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
4 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Buick Regal Market Overview

Based on 25 Buick Regal listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

25
Listed Now
$41,720
Avg. Asking Price
1979–1987
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $8,900
Low: $6,495 High: $89,900
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 88%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 20%
Good 20%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 25 listings →

Buick Regal Buyer's Guide

Mike Sullivan here. The 1987 Buick GNX is the fastest American production car of its era. That's not hyperbole — the GNX ran the quarter mile in the low 13-second range, making it quicker than a contemporary Corvette, faster than a Ferrari 328, and quicker than nearly anything else for sale in an American showroom. GM's own engineers reportedly drove the final prototypes against a Ferrari Testarossa and the GNX won.

But here's what the GNX legend obscures: the broader Regal family from 1973 to 1987 is an undervalued platform with excellent bones, strong parts support, and collector interest that extends well beyond the turbocharged variants. The G-body Regal that spawned the Grand National is one of GM's most capable platforms, and even the standard V6 and V8 Regals represent good value in the current market.

What to Check Before Buying

Grand National Documentation — Verify boost gauge, shift light, and underhood components are original GN equipment — not add-ons.
GNX Serial Number (if claimed) — Confirm the ASC/McLaren GNX serial plate and have a Buick specialist verify all GNX-specific components.
Turbocharger Condition — Check turbo shaft for play — hold the shaft and wiggle laterally, any movement indicates bearing wear.
Intercooler Condition — Inspect intercooler core for damage and verify it's free of oil contamination.
Lower Quarter Rust — Probe lower rear quarters and rockers — G-body rust in these locations.
Dashboard Condition — Inspect plastic dashboard for cracking — a common issue on 35+ year old GM interiors.
Transmission Operation — Test TH200-4R or TH350 through all ranges — smooth shifts with no slip.
Head Gasket — Check oil for coolant contamination and exhaust for white smoke — 3.8L head gasket is a known wear item.

Common Issues

Grand National clone cars built from standard Regals — documentation verification is essential. Turbocharger shaft wear and intercooler deterioration on high-mileage GN examples. Lower rear quarter and rocker panel rust. Plastic dashboard and interior trim deterioration on 1980s examples. 3.8L V6 head gasket issues on high-mileage or overheated engines. TH200-4R automatic transmission wear on performance-driven cars.

What to Look For

On Grand National and GNX cars, verify documentation before paying any performance premium — boost gauge, shift light, and specific underhood components are all verifiable. For GNX cars, the ASC/McLaren serial number plate and GNX-specific suspension and turbo components must all be present and verifiable. For all turbocharged Regals, inspect the intercooler condition and the turbo for shaft play. On standard Regals, check for rust at the lower rear quarter panels and rocker panels. Verify the automatic transmission operates smoothly through all ranges.

Price Guide

Standard Regal V6 or V8 (1978–1987): $5,000–$14,000. 1984–1985 Grand National T-top: $18,000–$32,000. 1986 Grand National: $25,000–$45,000. 1987 Grand National: $35,000–$65,000 for clean low-mileage examples. 1987 GNX (verified): $80,000–$180,000+. Clone GNs misrepresented as genuine: avoid without documentation.

Did You Know?

The 1987 Buick GNX outran a Ferrari 328 GTS in a comparison test conducted by Car and Driver — achieving 0-60 in 4.7 seconds to the Ferrari's 5.8 seconds. Only 547 GNXs were built, all in 1987, all black, all numbered. The turbocharged 3.8L V6 in the Grand National was controversial inside GM — Corvette engineers reportedly objected to a Buick outperforming their flagship, though the LT5-powered Corvette ZR-1 program had in fact already begun in 1985.

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