Elite Dealer

1972 Chevrolet Cheyenne

Indiana

$44,900

1972 Chevrolet Cheyenne

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Cheyenne

Year

1972

Body Type

Pickup Truck

Interior Color

Brown

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

460 V8 Nicely chromed out Auto trans Less than

Condition

Good

Description

1972 Chevrolet Cheyenne Long bed 460 V8 Nicely chromed out Auto trans Less than 1000 miles on engine and trans! New Gauges A/C Headers Dual Exhaust PS/PB Leather Bucket Seats Shaved doors Electric Windows Hydraulic Air Bags for lifting and lowering the truck

Chevrolet Cheyenne Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1971–1994
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Chevrolet Cheyenne was General Motors' answer to the question: can a truck be both capable and comfortable? For two decades it was the top-trim C/K pickup β€” the truck that made it acceptable to use a work vehicle as a daily driver without apology.
This guide covers
βœ“ 8-point inspection checklist
βœ“ Common issues & what to avoid
βœ“ In-person inspection guide
βœ“ Market pricing by year & condition
βœ“ 4 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Chevrolet Cheyenne Market Overview

Based on 21 Chevrolet Cheyenne listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

21
Listed Now
$24,262
Avg. Asking Price
1970–1989
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Above Average
This car: $44,900
Low: $7,495 High: $44,900
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 67% ◄
Manual 19%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 5%
Good 19% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 21 listings →
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What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1972 Chevrolet Cheyenne

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Chevrolet Cheyenne Buyer's Guide

Robert Halloran here. The Cheyenne name means something specific in the classic truck world β€” it was Chevrolet's top trim level for the C/K series from 1971 through 1994, positioning it above the Custom and Custom Deluxe as the luxury expression of the work truck. If you wanted the best Chevy pickup money could buy in 1972, you ordered a Cheyenne Super. The name has carried weight ever since.

Cheyenne trucks are now collected both as examples of peak 1970s truck luxury and as platforms for restomods where the full-length trim package adds a finished, upmarket look that bare Custom trucks can't replicate. Finding a clean original Cheyenne is worth the effort β€” these are the trucks that were actually cared for, because the people who paid Cheyenne prices tended to be the people who maintained their investment.

What to Check Before Buying

Interior Originality β€” Inspect woodgrain trim inserts for correct pattern β€” replacement woodgrain is usually visibly different from original.
Upholstery β€” Verify upholstery material and pattern matches Cheyenne specification for the model year.
Carpet vs Rubber Mats β€” Cheyenne trucks had full carpeting β€” rubber mat replacements indicate interior wear or amateur restoration.
Cheyenne Badging β€” Confirm Cheyenne emblems are present on the cab and tailgate β€” missing badging often indicates trim-level misrepresentation.
Cab Corner Rust β€” Probe cab corners β€” rust here is nearly universal on untreated Squarebody trucks.
Floor Pan & Rear Cab Mounts β€” Inspect floor pans from underneath and check rear cab mount area on 1973+ trucks.
Door Trim Panels β€” Check Cheyenne-specific door trim panels for correct material and condition β€” reproductions vary in quality.
Drivetrain Verification β€” Confirm engine and transmission match claimed specification via firewall tag decode.

Common Issues

Interior wear and replacement β€” the most common devaluation factor for Cheyenne trucks. Woodgrain trim fading, cracking, or replacement with incorrect materials. Carpet replacement with rubber mats. Same structural issues as all C/K trucks: cab corner rust, floor pan perforation, rear cab mount corrosion on Squarebody generation. Cheyenne-specific door trim panel deterioration.

What to Look For

Verify interior originality β€” this is what separates a premium Cheyenne from an equivalent Custom. Look for original Cheyenne-specific woodgrain trim inserts, correct upholstery pattern and material for the year, and full carpeting throughout (not rubber mats). On 1971–1972 trucks, verify the Cheyenne Super trim package if claimed. Check for the standard C/K rust issues: cab corners, floor pans, rear cab mounts. Confirm Cheyenne-specific exterior badging is present and correct.

Price Guide

1971–1972 Cheyenne on second-gen body: $25,000–$55,000 for correct examples. 1973–1974 Cheyenne Super (Squarebody): $20,000–$40,000. 1975–1987 Cheyenne (mid-tier): $12,000–$28,000. 1988–1994 OBS Cheyenne: $8,000–$20,000 for clean low-mileage examples. Intact original Cheyenne interiors add $4,000–$10,000 premium over comparable Custom trucks.

Did You Know?

The "Cheyenne Super" (1971–1973) was available with an interior package so upscale that it was compared favorably to Chevrolet passenger cars of the same era in contemporary automotive press tests. The name "Cheyenne" was chosen to evoke the frontier spirit β€” a tradition of naming some Chevrolet trucks after Native American peoples (Cheyenne, Apache) that continues to this day.

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