Classic Car Buyer's Guides
Expert buying guides for classic cars and trucks. Pre-purchase checklists, common issues, year-by-year analysis, and current market pricing — written by our editorial team of restoration specialists, historians, and collectors.
The Super Beetle is the most livable version of the air-cooled Beetle — MacPherson strut front suspension, a curved windshield from 1973, and a significantly larger front trunk. It's not the purist's choice, but it's a better car to actually use. The Cabriolet is the headline variant; a solid closed Super Beetle is one of the most accessible entries into air-cooled VW ownership.
The Karmann Ghia is the proof that beautiful design and honest engineering are not mutually exclusive — a hand-built body by Ghia of Turin on the proven Beetle platform, producing the most elegant Volkswagen ever made and one of the most practical classics available today.
Definitive buyer's guide for classic Volkswagen Beetle 1949-1979. Year-specific identification, pan rust hotspots, air-cooled flat-four inspection, and current market pricing for survivors and restorations.
The Volkswagen Westfalia is the original van life vehicle — a factory-built camper that has spawned a devoted global following and price tags that would surprise anyone who remembers when these were just cheap old campervans.
The Vanagon is not a Bus — it's a smarter, more capable vehicle that happens to carry the same counterculture credibility. The Syncro 4WD and Westfalia camper variants are the most sought-after configurations, and values have tripled in a decade.
The VW Bus is one of the most emotionally loaded vehicles in automotive history — and one of the most rust-prone. Knowing the difference between a restorable Bus and a money pit is the only skill that matters when buying one.