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1966 Ford Mustang

$44,997

1966 Ford Mustang

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

Mustang

Year

1966

Mileage

11,661 miles

VIN

6F09T743622

Body Type

Coupe

Transmission

Manual

Engine

289ci V8

Description

1966 Ford Mustang Fastback — Silver, 4-Speed, Inline Six with Period-Correct Detail Throughout Why This Car Is Special The 1966 Ford Mustang Fastback is one of the most recognizable shapes in American automotive history, and the fastback body style is where the design logic is most convincing. The long roofline sweeping into the rear deck gives the car a proportional completeness that the coupe and convertible simply do not have. Ford sold just over 499,000 Mustangs for the 1966 model year across all body styles, but the fastback — officially called the 2+2 — accounted for roughly 35,000 of those units, making it the least common of the three body styles that year.

That scarcity is part of why fastbacks consistently command more attention in the collector market than their coupe counterparts. The VIN on this car decodes to a Dearborn, Michigan assembly plant build, a 1966 model year, the fastback body style, and a six-cylinder engine — all consistent with the specifications presented here. The 'T' in the engine position of the VIN confirms the 200 cubic inch inline six, and the transmission code confirms the four-speed manual.

That combination is a detail worth understanding, because it tells you something about how this car was originally configured and sold. The 200 cubic inch inline six was Ford's standard engine for the 1966 Mustang. It produced 120 horsepower and was known for its durability and smooth power delivery.

It is not a performance engine by the standards of the era's V8s, but it is a correct and honest engine for the car. Pairing it with a four-speed manual transmission was a deliberate choice — the buyer who originally specified this car wanted the engagement of a manual gearbox without stepping up to a V8. The result is a lighter, more balanced car that is genuinely pleasant to drive on public roads.

Replacement parts for the 200 six remain widely available, and the engine's mechanical simplicity is an asset for anyone who plans to maintain the car themselves or on a budget. What sets this particular 1966 Ford Mustang Fastback apart is the overall presentation. The silver exterior over parchment vinyl interior is a combination that photographs well and holds up well in person.

The car has been maintained and detailed to a standard that reflects care rather than neglect, and the undercarriage confirms the car's structural integrity. For buyers looking for a fastback that is ready to drive and show without a full restoration budget, this car sits in a practical and honest position. Features - 200 cubic inch inline six-cylinder engine - 4-speed manual transmission - Fastback (2+2) body style - Silver exterior - Parchment vinyl interior - Console with floor shifter - Wood-rim steering wheel - Wire wheel covers - Whitewall tires - Chrome front and rear bumpers - Door courtesy lights - FoMoCo-branded engine bay components - Clean undercarriage Mechanical The 200 cubic inch inline six under this hood is the correct, numbers-matching engine for a Dearborn-built 1966 Ford Mustang Fastback of this VIN configuration.

Ford introduced the 200 six for the Mustang in 1965 as a lengthened version of the earlier 170 cubic inch unit. It added a seventh main bearing journal compared to the older engine, which reduced vibration significantly and gave it a reputation for long service life. The engine is painted Ford Corporate Blue, which is the factory-correct color for this application, and the engine bay retains its FoMoCo-branded components — the kind of detail that matters to judges at concours events and to buyers who care about originality.

The four-speed manual transmission is a meaningful spec on a six-cylinder car. Most inline six Mustangs left the factory with an automatic or a three-speed manual. The four-speed was an extra-cost option, and selecting it on a six-cylinder suggests the original buyer prioritized the driving experience.

The floor-mounted shifter connects to the console, giving the

Classic Ford Mustang Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1964–1973
~5 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The definitive buyer's guide for classic Ford Mustang 1964½-1973. Generation breakdown, rust hotspots, engine code identification, Marti Report essentials, and current market pricing.
This guide covers
10-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
6 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Ford Mustang Market Overview

Based on 500 Ford Mustang listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

500
Listed Now
$38,003
Avg. Asking Price
1964–2001
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $44,997
Low: $3,000 High: $284,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 52%
Manual 34% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 10%
Good 9%
Fair 3%
Poor 0%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 500 listings →
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Classic Ford Mustang Buyer's Guide

The Ford Mustang launched on April 17, 1964 and sold a million units faster than any car in American history. Sixty years later, the first-generation Mustang (1964½-1973) remains the cornerstone of the classic car hobby — the gateway car for new collectors, the trophy car for veteran enthusiasts, and the most cloned, faked, and re-stamped muscle car on the market. Whether you're hunting a base inline-six coupe or a documented Boss 429, knowing what separates the real cars from the tribute builds is the difference between an investment and a money pit.

What to Check Before Buying

Verify VIN against data plate and engine casting — Fifth digit of VIN = engine code. Cross-reference with block casting number behind cylinder head.
Order Marti Report for any 1967+ car over $30K — Ford's original production records via Marti Auto Works. $25 confirms what the car actually was when it left the factory.
Inspect torque boxes from underneath — Front and rear, where the unibody meets floor pans. Rotted torque boxes = $3,000-$6,000 repair and chassis flex.
Pull kick panels and check cowl seam — Where windshield base meets firewall. Cowl rust here drains into the cabin and rots floor pans.
Magnet test rocker panels and quarters — Body filler is non-magnetic. If the magnet doesn't stick, the panel has been filled — meaning underlying rust.
Check shock tower welds for cracks — Cracks radiating from upper shock mount = beaten chassis. Common on Big Block cars and 428 CJs.
Verify original GT/Mach 1/Boss equipment — Without Marti docs and matching data plate, treat all performance trim claims as clone candidates.
Test all electrical functions — Every gauge, every switch, every light. Brittle 60-year-old harnesses and worn switches are universal.
Compression test all eight cylinders — Should read 145-175 PSI uniformly. Variance >15% between cylinders = head gasket or ring problem.
Drive at least 30 minutes on highway — Listen for differential whine, transmission slip, brake pulsation, steering wander. Watch for overheating in stop-and-go traffic.

Common Issues

Mustang rust is everywhere and predictable. The torque boxes (front and rear, where the unibody meets the floor pans) are the structural killers — rotted torque boxes mean the car flexes under load and the doors won't close right. Cowl rust hides under the dashboard where the windshield base meets the firewall. Floor pans rust through from the underside in any car that lived north of the Mason-Dixon. Rear quarters, lower fenders behind the front wheels, and the trunk drop-offs are all standard rust zones. Mechanically, first-gen Mustangs are simple but the small details matter. The Toploader four-speed is bulletproof when synchronized properly; the C4 and C6 automatics are robust but commonly leak from front pump seals. The 9-inch rear is bombproof — but make sure the gear ratio matches what's claimed. Engine identification by casting numbers is essential: many cars wear the wrong block, and a 1968 GT 390 with a 1973 351W block is not what the seller is advertising. Electrical issues plague any 60-year-old car. The original wiring harnesses are brittle, the headlight switches fail, the gauges read inconsistently, and the turn signal switches die. Plan to replace the headlight switch, the ignition switch, and at least the engine-bay harness on any first-gen Mustang you buy. Budget $800-$1,500 for a complete electrical refresh.

What to Look For

Always start with the data plate (door tag) and the VIN. The fifth digit of the VIN is the engine code — A=289 4V, C=289 2V, D=289 standard, K=289 HiPo, F=302 2V, J=302 4V (Boss 302), M=351 4V, Q=428 CJ, R=428 SCJ Ram Air, S=390 4V, Z=Boss 429. Cross-reference the VIN engine code with the actual block casting number — they must agree. For any car claimed as a GT, Mach 1, Boss, Shelby, or Cobra Jet, demand a Marti Report. Marti Auto Works has Ford's original production records and can verify exactly what the car was when it left Dearborn or San Jose. A $25 Marti Report will save you $25,000 in mistakes. Cars without Marti documentation should be priced as clones, period. Unibody integrity is the other non-negotiable. Pop the hood, look at the shock towers — cracks radiating from the upper shock mount are common on Big Block cars and indicate the chassis has been beaten. Inspect the torque boxes from underneath. Lift the trunk mat and look at the trunk drop-offs. Pull the rear seat and check the floor where the seat bolts down. Fresh undercoating on a project car is a red flag — it's almost always hiding rust repairs.

Price Guide

Base 1965-1966 coupes with the inline-six or 289 2V remain the most accessible classic Mustang at $18,000-$32,000 for solid drivers. Convertibles add $8,000-$15,000 to equivalent coupe pricing. Fastbacks (1965-1968) are dramatically more valuable due to Bullitt and Eleanor pop-culture demand — a clean 1967-1968 fastback small-block runs $45,000-$75,000. 1967-1968 GT 390 cars (Bullitt-style) trade for $60,000-$110,000 with documentation. The 1968 GT 428 Cobra Jet is the holy grail of the small-bumper era at $120,000-$220,000 for documented numbers-matching cars. 1969-1970 Boss 302 and Mach 1 cars run $70,000-$140,000 depending on condition and equipment. The Boss 429 is six-figure-plus territory — $300,000-$600,000 for documented examples. 1971-1973 cars (the Big Body era) have historically been the bargain entry point but appreciation has accelerated since 2020. A clean 1973 Mach 1 with the 351 Cobra Jet now runs $45,000-$75,000 — up dramatically from the $25,000 territory of a decade ago. Project cars (running but rough) start around $15,000 for coupes and $22,000 for fastbacks.

Did You Know?

The Mustang was originally going to be called the Cougar — Lee Iacocca's team had "Cougar" emblems already produced before a focus group response prompted the last-minute name change. The Cougar name was eventually used for the Mercury sister car launched for 1967. Ford originally projected first-year Mustang sales of 100,000 units. The car sold 418,812 units in its abbreviated 18-month launch year, and over a million Mustangs were sold by March 1966 — a sales pace that has never been equaled by any other American automobile launch. The iconic 1964½ designation isn't actually a real model year — Ford built the early Mustangs as 1965 models, but the cars produced before September 1964 had different alternators, generators, and other details, leading collectors to designate them "1964½" cars to distinguish them.

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