Elite Dealer

1967 Jeep CJ-5

Michigan

$5,995

1967 Jeep CJ-5

Vehicle Details

Make

Jeep

Model

CJ-5

Year

1967

Mileage

123,456 miles

Body Type

SUV

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

4WD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

Buick V6

Condition

Fair

Description

1967 Jeep CJ-5. All original Buick V-6 motor and transmission, what body work needs to be done is basically what you see. It does run when you put fuel down the carburetor. The front seat is not original, but everything else is.

The metal top on this is the best condition of one I have ever seen with no rust dents or dings, and the doors open and close perfectly with tight seals and the rear window opens and closes perfectly as well. Also comes with the original spare tire. I purchased this with the intent to restore because its a perfect candidate for that.

I would LOVE it to go to someone who wants to make it original, that is my hope. I also have an old jeeping trailer I purchased to go along with it. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Classic Jeep CJ-5 Buyer's Guide

Full guide
R
Robert Halloran
Classic Trucks
1954–1983
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Complete buyer's guide for the Jeep CJ-5 (1954–1983). Generation breakdown by era, frame and tub inspection, drivetrain identification, and current market values for stock and modified examples.
This guide covers
✓ 10-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 5 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Jeep CJ-5 Market Overview

Based on 24 Jeep CJ-5 listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

24
Listed Now
$18,520
Avg. Asking Price
1967–1983
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $5,995
Low: $5,995 High: $37,495
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 13% ◄
Manual 71%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 8%
Good 29%
Fair 8% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 24 listings →
💰

What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1967 Jeep CJ-5

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Classic Jeep CJ-5 Buyer's Guide

The Jeep CJ-5 is the original American off-road icon — a direct descendant of the World War II Willys Jeep, refined for civilian use and sold continuously from 1954 to 1983. In nearly thirty years of production, the CJ-5 barely changed in concept: a short wheelbase, a rugged ladder frame, a solid front axle, and enough ground clearance to go where no sensible person had been before. Today clean CJ-5s are legitimately collectible, and the market for sorted originals is stronger than it has ever been.

What to Check Before Buying

Inspect frame rails at body mount points — Primary rust concentration zone. Use flashlight and screwdriver. Soft metal at mount points is a structural concern.
Check body tub floor and lower cowl — Steel tub floors rust through from below. Lower cowl panels rust from water ingress at windshield. Fiberglass tub = rust eliminated but value reduced for purists.
Test front Dana 30 axle for play — Grab front wheel at 9 and 3 o'clock, rock firmly. Any play = worn wheel bearings or damaged axle housing from trail use.
Check for bent or cracked axle housing — Trail use commonly bends the front and rear axle housings. Sight down the axle — any curve indicates damage.
Verify transfer case engagement — Both high-range and low-range 4WD must engage cleanly. Transfer case that slips out = rebuild required.
Identify engine and verify condition — F-head four, AMC six, or AMC V8? Compression test all cylinders. Should read within 10% across all cylinders.
Check steering box and tie rods — CJ-5 steering is inherently imprecise. Excessive play beyond normal (more than 3 inches at wheel) means worn box.
Inspect rollbar mounting points — Rollbar bolts to the body tub. Check mounting flanges for cracks or rust-through on both tub and frame.
Test brakes — drum all around (pre-1977) — Drum brakes on all four corners. Pedal should be firm. Any pull to one side = stuck cylinder.
Document with photos before purchase — Frame rails, tub floor, axle housings, engine, transfer case, every body panel.

Common Issues

Rust affects both the body tub and the frame on CJ-5s. The frame rails rust at body mount points and at crossmembers — these are structural issues. The body tub rusts at the floor, lower cowl, and rear corners. The Hurricane F-head four-cylinder is long-lived but slow and parts for it are becoming harder to source. AMC inline-sixes and V8s are robust — the 258 is the most reliable engine in the lineup. Trail use causes specific damage: bent axle housings (front and rear), cracked differential covers, stripped skid plate mounting threads, and worn U-joints are all common on trucks with serious off-road history. These are identifiable on inspection — and should all factor into price negotiation. The CJ-5's short wheelbase (81 inches) makes it inherently tippy. If the truck has been lifted without a corresponding suspension geometry correction, it's more unstable than stock. Always ask about lift kit installation history.

What to Look For

Frame first. The ladder frame on a CJ-5 is the foundation of everything. Inspect every frame rail with a flashlight, probe suspicious areas with a screwdriver. Pay special attention to the body mount points and the front and rear crossmembers. Body tub second. Is it steel or fiberglass? Steel original tubs rust but are correct for value purposes. Fiberglass tubs are practical but reduce collector value. Inspect the steel tub floor from both above and below. Drivetrain third. The front Dana 30 and rear Dana 44 (or Dana 35 on some years) are the 4WD system. Test both front and rear locking and listen for differential noise. Bent axle housings from trail use are the most common hidden problem.

Price Guide

Early CJ-5 with Hurricane four-cylinder in clean original condition: $18,000–$35,000. AMC-era CJ-5 (1972–1983) in sorted stock condition: $15,000–$28,000. Professional restorations to correct stock specification: $35,000–$55,000. Modified trail rigs with lift kits, aftermarket bumpers, and lockers: $10,000–$25,000 depending on quality — the modifications rarely add value and often reduce it for non-trail buyers. Early F-head four-cylinder trucks in concours-original condition are approaching $40,000–$55,000 as supply shrinks.

Did You Know?

The CJ-5's 81-inch wheelbase was derived directly from the M38A1 military Jeep. The M38A1 was the Korean War-era military vehicle; the CJ-5 was its civilian equivalent, using the same basic dimensions and the same front suspension geometry. Kaiser Jeep, which owned the brand from 1953 to 1970, built CJ-5s alongside military M151 Jeeps at the same Toledo, Ohio factory — meaning civilian and military Jeeps literally came off the same assembly line for over a decade.

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