Elite Dealer

1957 Chevrolet Nomad

$97,495

1957 Chevrolet Nomad

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Nomad

Year

1957

Mileage

35,349 miles

VIN

AMB4248

Body Type

Wagon

Transmission

Automatic

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

350 Ram Jet Roller Rocker 340hp

Description

1957 Chevrolet Nomad Longtime Nomad collector downsizing to one, the 1957 was completely restored to conquer any travel distance - coast to coast. Arizona Speed 350 Ram Jet Roller Rocker Engine (340 hp) built to look like 57 Fuelie backed by Turbo 400 with 308 rear end gears. Magnaflow exhaust sounds fantastic.

Vintage Air Gen 4, Spahl Electric Fans, Power Boosted Baer Disc Brakes, 2” Drop Spindles, Cragar SS -Radial Tires. All interior replaced with leather, wire harness including upgraded radio in uncut dash. A great eye appeal Nomad! Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Chevrolet Nomad Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1955–1961
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The most beautiful station wagon ever built — the 1955–1957 Chevrolet Nomad is a rolling Motorama dream at the intersection of practicality and pure 1950s style.
This guide covers
âś“ 8-point inspection checklist
âś“ Common issues & what to avoid
âś“ In-person inspection guide
âś“ Market pricing by year & condition
âś“ 3 FAQs answered
âś“ History & fun facts

Chevrolet Nomad Market Overview

Based on 12 Chevrolet Nomad listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

12
Listed Now
$85,305
Avg. Asking Price
1955–1971
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $97,495
Low: $33,795 High: $108,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 100% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 33%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 12 listings →
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Chevrolet Nomad Buyer's Guide

There are station wagons, and then there is the Chevrolet Nomad. Introduced in 1955 as the most glamorous wagon ever offered by an American mass-market manufacturer, the two-door Nomad merged Harley Earl's Motorama dream car with practical family transportation. The 1955–1957 Nomad, with its distinctive B-pillarless two-door hardtop wagon body, is one of the most visually striking designs of the 1950s — and one of the most desirable tri-five Chevys in existence.

What to Check Before Buying

Inspect rear roof seams and inner roof structure for trapped moisture and rust —
Test two-piece tailgate mechanism fully (drop-down and lift-up glass) —
Probe floor pans under carpet and full rocker panels —
Verify stainless B-pillar trim condition — budget $800–$2,000 for replacement —
Confirm engine pad stampings and trim tag match documentation —
Inspect tailgate skin and hinge pockets for hidden rust —
Check all glass and rubber seals (especially rear quarter windows) —
Verify any FI equipment is complete and original (not reproduction) —

Common Issues

The unique rear roof structure with its ribbed panels traps water and rusts from the inside — this is the Nomad's signature problem and the most expensive to fix correctly. The two-piece tailgate mechanism is complex and prone to misalignment. Stainless B-pillar trim is scarce and expensive in perfect condition. Numbers-matching fraud is a real concern at these price levels.

What to Look For

The ideal Nomad purchase is a southern car with continuous ownership history, verifiable VIN/trim/engine stampings, and original or correct-era stainless trim. A 1957 with the FI 283 is the ultimate find — extremely rare in Nomad guise. For the budget collector, a solid-bodied 1956 with a freshly rebuilt 265 and good glass is the safest entry. Avoid any car where the seller can't produce stamping documentation at these price levels.

Price Guide

1955–1957 Nomad: driver quality $55,000–$85,000; professional restoration $90,000–$130,000; concours $150,000+. FI cars add 25–40% premium. 1958–1961 Nomad: $15,000–$28,000 in good driver condition, $35,000–$50,000 restored.

Did You Know?

The Nomad was originally designed for the Corvette chassis — Harley Earl's dream was a sports-wagon Corvette. When GM decided the volume couldn't justify the Corvette tooling cost, it was adapted to the standard chassis, but the original name 'Corvette Nomad' was used at Motorama before it became simply 'Nomad.' Only 22,950 two-door Nomads were built across all three years — roughly the same as a single month of Chevrolet Bel Air production.

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