Elite Dealer

1965 Ford Falcon

Indiana

$35,000

1965 Ford Falcon

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

Falcon

Year

1965

VIN

KMR5066PD

Body Type

Hardtop

Description

1965 Ford Falcon Altered wheelbase car Chevamoco. BBC. enderle 8 stack injection. 4 speed Muncie. 9 inch Ford rear. This car was Bobby Lagana srs. From NY. Built in 1965. Raced in 1966 to about 1969. It was a match race car. It has been fully restored to its racing conditions of 1966. This car is retired. It is a museum piece or show car now. It can not be raced. Bill of sale only. No title.
Body Style: Hardtop
Doors: 2

Ford Falcon Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1960–1970
~2 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Ford Falcon is the original pony car ancestor β€” a compact that outsold every competitor in 1960 and directly inspired the Mustang, making it one of the most historically significant American cars of the postwar era.
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

Ford Falcon Market Overview

Based on 36 Ford Falcon listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

36
Listed Now
$21,059
Avg. Asking Price
1960–1969
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Above Average
This car: $35,000
Low: $3,000 High: $50,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 50%
Manual 28%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 8%
Good 6%
Fair 8%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 36 listings →
πŸ’°

What is this car worth?

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Ford Falcon Buyer's Guide

Mike Sullivan here. The Ford Falcon occupies a unique position in American automotive history: it's both the car that saved Ford's compact-car ambitions and the direct genetic ancestor of the Mustang. Without the Falcon's success, there would be no Mustang β€” the Falcon's platform, engine, and mechanicals were the foundation on which Lee Iacocca's team built the car that defined a generation. That historical significance alone would make the Falcon worth understanding. But the Falcon is also, on its own merits, a genuinely good small car.

The Falcon ran from 1960 through 1970, covering several design generations and a performance evolution that produced some legitimately quick cars. The Sprint variant with a V8 is a driver that surprises people, and the early 1960 Falcon in base form is a piece of American industrial history that you can buy for a song.

What to Check Before Buying

Rear Wheel Arch Rust β€” Probe rear wheel arch areas β€” very common rust location on Falcons from any region.
Lower Quarter Panels β€” Check lower quarters front and rear for rust perforation.
Floor Pan Condition β€” Inspect floor pans from underneath β€” perforation is common on older examples.
Cowl Area β€” Check under the windshield base for water intrusion rust.
Sprint V8 Verification β€” On claimed Sprint models, verify V8 engine code and original drivetrain via the door sticker.
Convertible Floor (if applicable) β€” On convertibles, check the floor in the top-well area for water damage and rust.
Front Suspension β€” Check idler arm and tie rod ends for wear β€” grab each front wheel and check for play.
Six-Cylinder Idle β€” Test cold start and warm idle β€” rough idle often indicates distributor wear or carburetor issues.

Common Issues

Rear wheel arch rust β€” very common on unrestored examples from any climate. Lower quarter panel rust and floor pan perforation. Cowl area water intrusion causing rust under the windshield. Convertible top mechanism deterioration. 144ci inline-six timing issues from worn distributor. Front suspension wear (idler arm and tie rod ends) on high-mileage examples.

What to Look For

The Falcon has predictable rust in the rear wheel arches, lower quarter panels, and floor pans β€” these cars are structurally not as rust-resistant as the larger Ford products of the era. Check the cowl area for water intrusion damage. Verify V8-equipped cars have the correct engine code if claiming Sprint specification β€” the 289ci V8 was a factory option, not a field-installed unit. On convertibles, inspect the top mechanism and the floor in the area around the top well for water damage. Test the inline-six for smooth starting and idle β€” the 170ci is more robust than the 144ci in these applications.

Price Guide

1960–1963 Falcon sedan (six-cylinder): $5,000–$12,000. 1963–1965 Falcon Sprint V8 hardtop: $12,000–$25,000. 1963–1965 Sprint V8 convertible: $20,000–$40,000. 1964–1965 Falcon with 289ci: $14,000–$28,000. 1966–1970 Falcon: $6,000–$15,000. Ranchero variants typically command a 20–35% premium over equivalent sedan examples.

Did You Know?

The Ford Falcon outsold every compact car in America in 1960, selling over 400,000 units in its first year β€” a record for a new model introduction at that time. The first-generation Falcon platform was so successful that Lee Iacocca used it as the basis for the Mustang concept. The Falcon was sold in Australia where it became a completely separate and more powerful car line β€” Australian Falcons are unrelated to American Falcons beyond the name.

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