SOLD on Jun 27, 2026
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1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS

$64,500

1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS

Vehicle Details

Make

Chevrolet

Model

Chevelle SS

Year

1970

Mileage

47,200 miles

VIN

136370A1344065

Body Type

Convertible

Transmission

Automatic

Engine

396 Big Block

Description

WOW A TRUE 1970 CHEVELLE SS NUMBERS MATCHIGN 396/350HP FINISHED IN DAYTONA YELLOW HAVE BUILT SHEET SEE PICS PAINTED OVER 20 YEARS AGO STILL LOOKS GREAT ALL ORIGINAL SHEET METAL ORIGINAL FLOORS NO RUST SEE PICS POWER STEERING POWER DISC BRAKES CHEVELLE SS WHEELS JUST TUNED AND SERVICED RUNS AWESOME SOUNDS ASESOME SEE VIDEO HAS A 12 BOLT REAR BLACK SS STRIPES BLACK BUCKET SEATS CENTER CONSOLE STAPLE SHIFTER FUNCTIONAL COWN INDUCTION HOOD WOW JUST AN AWESOEM REAL DEAL 1970 SS FINANCING AVAIL TRADES WELCOME 631-620-3330 Here at Hollywood Motors, we pride ourselves on selling quality classic cars at affordable prices. Please keep in mind that all of our classics are pre-owned vehicles, not new vehicles. We describe these automobiles to the best of our knowledge, and place many photos on our website.

We are not responsible for misprints or typos. With any pre-owned vehicle, there may be minor imperfections, and we encourage you to come and inspect our inventory in person before you buy any vehicle.

Chevrolet Chevelle SS Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1964–1972
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Chevrolet Chevelle SS is the gold standard of the American muscle car era β€” a mid-size platform that took on every engine Chevrolet made, from the 396 to the legendary LS6 454, and produced some of the fastest, most purpose-built factory street machines ever sold.
This guide covers
βœ“ 10-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 Chevelle Market Overview

Based on 262 Chevrolet Chevelle listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

262
Listed Now
$62,468
Avg. Asking Price
1964–1977
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Average Range
This car: $64,500
Low: $2,500 High: $379,970
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 59% ◄
Manual 32%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 21%
Good 8%
Fair 1%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 262 listings →

Chevrolet Chevelle SS Buyer's Guide

Mike Sullivan here. The Chevelle SS needs no introduction, but it does need honest context: this is one of the most desirable muscle cars in the market, which means it's also one of the most heavily cloned. Understanding what you're buying β€” and paying for β€” requires more homework on a Chevelle SS than on almost any other classic. Get it right, and you've got one of the great American performance machines. Get it wrong, and you've paid a premium for a base Malibu with SS emblems bolted on.

The SS package ran from 1964 through 1972 on the A-body Chevelle platform. Each year produced something meaningful, but the 1969–1972 era is where the market concentrates. The LS6 454 of 1970 is widely considered the most powerful muscle car engine ever offered in a factory car, and a correct, documented LS6 Chevelle is the holy grail for serious collectors.

What to Check Before Buying

Trim Tag Verification β€” Photograph and decode the trim tag β€” verify SS option code is present before paying any performance premium.
Engine Casting Numbers β€” Record the engine block casting number and suffix code β€” verify against documented 396/454 casting references.
Broadcast Sheet β€” Check under the carpet for the broadcast sheet β€” its presence and matching content confirms factory build.
Cowl Rust β€” Inspect the cowl area at the base of the windshield β€” rust here is structural and expensive to repair correctly.
Lower Quarter Panels β€” Probe lower rear quarters behind the wheels β€” probe with a pick, not just visual inspection.
Trunk Floor β€” Check the trunk floor for rust perforation, especially around the spare tire well.
Front Subframe β€” Inspect the perimeter front subframe for cracks at body mount points.
Muncie Transmission (4-speed) β€” Test all gears β€” synchronizer wear causes rough shifts and is a $1,500–$2,500 rebuild.
Hood Tachometer (if equipped) β€” Verify the hood tach is original and functioning β€” reproductions exist and an original adds value.
Documentation Package β€” Request title history, any available service records, and original window sticker if available β€” all add value.

Common Issues

Clone cars misrepresented as factory SS models β€” documentation verification is essential. Cowl area rust (where the windshield meets the hood) is a structural repair on the A-body platform. Lower rear quarter panel rust behind the wheels. Trunk floor rust. Big-block 396/454 oil leaks from rear main seal. Muncie four-speed transmission gear synchronizer wear. Incorrect or incorrect-year engine and transmission combinations on restored cars.

What to Look For

The trim tag and broadcast sheet are the primary verification documents β€” decode these before paying any SS premium. Inspect the trim tag (located inside the driver's door or door jamb depending on year) for the SS option code. Verify engine code matches claimed displacement β€” 396 and 454 engine blocks have specific casting numbers that can be verified. Check the cowl area, trunk floor, and lower quarter panels for rust β€” these are the structural weak points on the unibody A-body. Verify the frame rails (front subframe perimeter frame) aren't cracked at the body mounts.

Price Guide

1964–1965 SS 283/327 cars: $20,000–$35,000. 1966–1967 SS 396 drivers: $28,000–$55,000. 1968–1969 SS 396 (documented): $35,000–$75,000. 1970 SS 454 LS5 (360hp, documented): $65,000–$110,000. 1970 SS 454 LS6 (450hp, documented): $150,000–$400,000+. 1971–1972 SS 454 (emissions-era): $35,000–$75,000. Base Malibus misrepresented as SS: $15,000–$40,000 β€” avoid without documentation.

Did You Know?

The 1970 Chevelle SS LS6 was officially the most powerful American production car of the muscle car era β€” 450 horsepower from the factory, with actual output estimated by most engineers at 490–510 horsepower. Chevrolet understated the rating to avoid insurance surcharges. The "SS 396" badge was kept on 1970 models even after the engine grew to 402ci β€” Chevrolet judged that "SS 396" had better marketing cachet than "SS 402." True 1970 SS cars have 396 badges on cars with 402ci engines.

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