1983 Chevrolet S10

Mundelein, Illinois

$19,900 $24,900

1983 Chevrolet S10

Video

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

S10

Year

1983

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

- SHOW QUALITY PAINT -SEE VIDEO Stock # 83560KFCV in Mundelein

Condition

Excellent

Description

Used 1983 Chevrolet S-10 - 350 V8 ENGINE - SHOW QUALITY PAINT -SEE VIDEO Stock # 83560KFCV in Mundelein, IL at North Shore Classics, IL\'s premier pre-owned luxury car dealership. Come test drive a Chevrolet today!

Chevrolet S10 Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1982–2004
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Chevrolet S10 was America's best-selling compact pickup for two decades β€” a practical, capable small truck that is now crossing into classic territory with an enthusiast following that appreciates its simplicity, its lowrider heritage, and its growing status as a 1980s icon.
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 S10 Market Overview

Based on 18 Chevrolet S10 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

18
Listed Now
$24,879
Avg. Asking Price
1982–1999
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Average Range
This car: $19,900
Low: $9,495 High: $62,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 67%
Manual 22%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 33% ◄
Good 6%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 18 listings →
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What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1983 Chevrolet S10

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Chevrolet S10 Buyer's Guide

Robert Halloran here. The S10 is an interesting case study in how the classic market evolves. Ten years ago, these were cheap used trucks. Five years ago, they were cheap used trucks with a growing fan base. Today, clean S10s β€” especially the early examples and the performance variants β€” are crossing $10,000 for the first time, and the trend is accelerating. The people who bought nice S10s three years ago made smart investments.

The S10 ran from 1982 through 2004, making it one of the longest-lived compact truck platforms in American history. It spawned the GMC S15, the Blazer/Jimmy mini-SUV, and established a template for compact truck performance that competitors spent years trying to match. The lowrider and mini-truck scenes adopted it early, and its heritage in those cultures is now part of its collector appeal.

What to Check Before Buying

Cab Corner Rust β€” Probe cab corners behind the doors β€” thin metal that rusts through even on well-maintained trucks.
Floor Pan Condition β€” Check floor pans from underneath and inside β€” perforation is common on older examples.
4.3L Intake Gasket β€” Check oil filler for creamy emulsification β€” a sign of the known lower intake manifold gasket failure on 4.3L V6 engines.
Rear Cab Area β€” Inspect the rear cab where it meets the bed β€” rust accumulates in this joint on both generations.
Frame Rails β€” Check frame rails for surface rust and cracks at cross-member welds.
4WD Engagement β€” On 4WD models, engage 4WD high and low β€” both should work smoothly.
SS Trim Authenticity β€” On claimed SS models, verify factory SS codes on the trim tag β€” dealer-added badges exist.
Transmission Condition β€” Test automatic through all gears β€” 4L60-E (second-gen) is known for solenoid failures on high-mileage units.

Common Issues

Cab corner rust is nearly universal on northern-state first-gen S10s. Floor pan perforation from mat deterioration and water intrusion. 4.3L V6 lower intake manifold gasket failure (causes coolant/oil mixing β€” a well-known issue with a known fix). Worn front axle U-joints on 4WD models. Automatic transmission (4L60-E on second-gen) electrical issues from age. Rust at rear cab mounts and tailgate corners.

What to Look For

Rust inspection is the primary task: check cab corners behind the doors, floor pans, lower door edges, and the rear cab-to-bed junction. First-gen S10s from northern states are often badly compromised in these areas despite serviceable exteriors. Verify the 4.3L V6 (1988+) doesn't have a collapsed lower intake manifold gasket β€” a known issue on these engines that causes coolant and oil mixing. On first-gen trucks, check the frame rails for rust at the cross-member welds. Verify 4WD engagement on K-model trucks. Confirm the S10 SS trim is factory rather than dealer-added badges.

Price Guide

1982–1987 first-gen S10, driver condition: $4,000–$9,000. Clean, rust-free first-gen: $9,000–$18,000. 1988–1993 first-gen with 4.3L: $5,000–$12,000. Second-gen (1994–2004) standard: $3,000–$10,000. S10 SS (2003–2004): $8,000–$18,000 for clean examples. Custom or show-truck builds: highly variable, $8,000–$50,000+.

Did You Know?

The S10 was the best-selling compact pickup in America for most of the 1980s and 1990s, outselling the Toyota and Nissan competitors that prompted its creation. The 4.3L V6 in the S10 was literally half of a small-block V8 β€” GM removed two cylinders from the 350ci V8 architecture to create it, giving the engine exceptional parts compatibility with the V8 ecosystem. The S10-based Blazer was the first compact SUV to find mainstream acceptance in America, predating the "SUV boom" by nearly a decade.

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