How much is a Corvette C6 Z06 worth in 2026?
I've spent two decades chronicling every Corvette generation, and the C6 Z06 changed the conversation in a way that only the original L88 and the ZR-1 C4 had previously. Chevrolet's engineers built a car around a purpose-designed 7.0-litre LS7 engine — not a truck platform derivation, not an existing block bored out, but a purpose-built racing architecture with a titanium connecting rod specification and a dry-sump lubrication system designed for sustained lateral loads. That is exotic car engineering at a $70,000 sticker price.
The LS7 Engine
The LS7 is a 427-cubic-inch (7.0-litre) small-block with a specific architecture that shares little with any truck or passenger car application. Key details:
- Titanium connecting rods (race specification) — identical to those used in the C6.R Le Mans race car
- Dry-sump lubrication system — maintains oil pressure through sustained 1.0+ G cornering
- CNC-ported cylinder heads with larger intake and exhaust valves than any other LS family engine
- 505 hp at 6,300 rpm; 470 lb-ft at 4,800 rpm
- 8,100 rpm redline — the highest of any production Corvette engine
2026 Pricing
| Year | Notes | Price Range |
|---|---|---|
| 2006 | First year, highest production volume | $35,000–$52,000 |
| 2007–2011 | Refined suspension, Z07 package available | $38,000–$65,000 |
| 2012–2013 | 60th Anniversary editions, final production | $52,000–$85,000 |
| 427 Convertible (2013) | Limited edition, 60th Anniversary | $65,000–$95,000 |
Known Mechanical Issues
The LS7 has a documented issue with intake valve carbon deposits — a direct-injection problem that requires periodic intake cleaning (every 30,000–40,000 miles). The sixth-gear synchronizer on the TR6060 manual transmission is a known wear point on track-driven cars; verify it engages cleanly. The dry-sump oil tank is aluminum and should be inspected for cracks on high-mileage cars. These are manageable issues, not dealbreakers — but they require acknowledgment in any purchase inspection.
"The C6 Z06 is the most complete performance value in the American collector market right now. The LS7 is an exotic engine by any measure — titanium rods, dry sump, 8,100 rpm redline. The fact that it wears Corvette badges and costs $45,000 is the market's oversight, not the car's."
— Tom Ramirez