SOLD on Jun 15, 2026
Elite Dealer

1977 Mercedes-Benz 450 SL

Michigan

$13,995

1977 Mercedes-Benz 450 SL

Vehicle Details

Make

Mercedes-Benz

Model

450 SL

Year

1977

Mileage

186,000 miles

Interior Color

Red

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

450

Condition

Good

Description

1977 Mercedes-Benz 450SL Roadster – Restored Interior, Runs Excellent Classic 1977 Mercedes 450SL in great mechanical shape, previously restored by its last owner. This iconic roadster offers timeless style and solid performance. Highlights: Mechanically sound – runs and drives great with no issues Beautifully restored interior – clean, classic Mercedes luxury Exterior shows well but could use some love to bring back its full shine This is a great opportunity to own a classic Mercedes roadster with the hard work already done inside.

A perfect weekend cruiser or light project to finish off. Clean, reliable, and ready to enjoy.

Classic Mercedes-Benz 450 SL Buyer's Guide

Full guide
S
Sarah Whitfield
Pre-War Classics
1973–1980
~5 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Definitive buyer's guide for the Mercedes-Benz 450 SL (R107) 1973-1980. Rust hotspots, M117 V8 maintenance, hardtop roof storage, and current market pricing for survivors and restorations.
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“ 5 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Mercedes-Benz 450 SL Market Overview

Based on 55 Mercedes-Benz 450 SL listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

55
Listed Now
$17,289
Avg. Asking Price
1972–1980
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Average Range
This car: $13,995
Low: $7,495 High: $35,495
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 71%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 7%
Good 16% ◄
Fair 2%
Poor 4%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 55 listings →

Classic Mercedes-Benz 450 SL Buyer's Guide

The Mercedes-Benz 450 SL is the highest-volume variant of the legendary R107 SL platform, which ran from 1971 through 1989 β€” the longest production run of any Mercedes-Benz body style ever. Built with the over-engineered standards that defined Stuttgart in its golden era, the 450 SL combined the 4.5L V8 with the unmistakable convertible roadster silhouette and a build quality that has allowed many of these cars to survive in remarkable condition fifty years on. For collectors entering the SL market today, the 450 SL represents the most accessible entry into proper R107 ownership β€” and the smart-money buy when patience and proper inspection guide the purchase decision.

What to Check Before Buying

Order Mercedes-Benz Classic Center Data Card ($80-$150) β€” Available from MB Classic Center via chassis number. Confirms original engine, color, options, delivery destination.
Verify both soft top and hardtop present β€” Original matching-numbers hardtop adds 10-15% value. Cars missing hardtop are dramatically less desirable.
Inspect jacking points under rocker panels β€” Four steel-reinforced points. Critical structural rust point. Rust here = $2,500-$6,000 repair.
Magnet test rear quarter panels β€” Body filler is non-magnetic. Driver-quality cars universally have filler β€” verify how much before purchase.
Lift trunk mat and inspect trunk floor β€” Trunk floor and spare tire well rot from underneath. Standard rust point on neglected cars.
Inspect windshield surround at cowl β€” From inside cabin. Rust here causes water leaks that rot dashboard wood and electrical components.
Test all climate control functions β€” Heat, A/C, defrost, mode selector. Vacuum-actuated system fails expensively. $2,500-$5,000 for proper repair.
Check rear suspension subframe bushings β€” From underneath. Collapsed bushings cause launch clunking. $1,500-$3,000 to replace properly.
Compression test all eight cylinders β€” M117 V8 should read 145-180 PSI uniformly. Variance >15% = head gasket or worn rings.
Verify K-Jetronic fuel injection function β€” Bosch mechanical injection works well when serviced. Failed fuel distributor = $2,500-$4,500 to replace.

Common Issues

R107 rust follows predictable patterns. The jacking points (under the rocker panels at front and rear), the rear quarter panels (lower section behind the rear wheels), the trunk floor, the front fender behind the front wheels, the windshield surround at the cowl, and the rear wheel arches are all standard rust zones. The unibody construction means rust here isn't merely cosmetic β€” proper repair requires careful welding and is expensive. Mechanically, the M117 4.5L V8 is among the most over-engineered V8s Mercedes ever produced. Cast iron block, aluminum heads, mechanical Bosch K-Jetronic fuel injection, and timing chain (not belt) for primary drive. The engine commonly exceeds 250,000 miles when properly serviced. Common issues include timing chain stretch (replace at 100,000-150,000 mile intervals), valve stem seal leaks (causing morning oil-burn smoke), and Bosch K-Jet fuel distributor failures ($2,500-$4,500 to replace properly). The 3-speed automatic (1973-1976) and 4-speed automatic (1977-1980) are both robust but require regular fluid changes. The rear suspension subframe bushings collapse over time and cause clunking on launch β€” a $1,500-$3,000 repair. Vacuum systems control everything from door locks to climate to throttle linkage, and 50-year-old vacuum lines crack everywhere β€” budget $800-$2,000 for complete vacuum line replacement on any neglected car.

What to Look For

The Mercedes-Benz Classic Center (in Long Beach, California) maintains original production records and can issue a Data Card ($80-$150) confirming the original specification of any 450 SL: chassis number, engine number, paint code, interior code, options, and delivery destination. For any 450 SL priced over $30,000, the Data Card is recommended documentation. Rust inspection is the first non-negotiable. Lift the car on a hoist or use jack stands and inspect the jacking points (the four steel reinforced points where the factory jack attaches). Inspect the rear quarter panels with strong light and a magnet β€” body filler over rust is universal on driver-quality cars. Lift the trunk mat and inspect the trunk floor and the spare tire well. Inspect the windshield surround at the cowl from inside the cabin β€” rust here causes water leaks that rot the dashboard. Engine and transmission verification: the M117 V8 engine number is stamped on a flat pad on the driver-side of the block (passenger side on RHD cars). The transmission number is on a tag attached to the case. Cross-reference both against the Data Card. Hardtop condition is unique to R107 ownership. The 450 SL came standard with both a soft top (cloth convertible top) and a removable hardtop (steel structure with rear glass). The hardtop is critical to winter weather use and adds 10-15% value when present and original. Verify the hardtop fits properly, the rear glass is original (Sigla glass with date code), and the headliner inside the hardtop is intact. Electrical audit: test every gauge, every switch, every climate function. The R107 climate control system is notoriously complex β€” vacuum-actuated heater valves, electrically-actuated mode doors, and a two-zone temperature regulation that fails expensively. Budget $1,500-$3,500 for proper climate system service on any car older than 40 years.

Price Guide

1973-1976 450 SL cars (early R107) are the most desirable era. Driver-quality 1973-1975 cars run $22,000-$38,000. 1973 was the federalized launch year and US-market cars from this period have unique 5-mph bumpers in less-attractive forms. 1975-1976 cars with refined interior trim are the sweet spot at $25,000-$42,000 for solid drivers. 1977-1980 450 SL cars saw the introduction of the more sophisticated 4-speed automatic (1977+) and updated emissions equipment that slightly reduced output. Driver-quality cars from this era run $20,000-$35,000. The 1980 model year is the final year of the 450 SL designation in US markets β€” the 1981 cars switched to the 380 SL (3.8L V8) due to federal fuel-economy regulations. Documented original-paint, low-mileage, two-owner cars are now bringing significant premium pricing. Concours-grade restored 1973-1975 450 SLs trade for $45,000-$75,000. Documented sub-30,000-mile original cars in time-warp condition: $55,000-$95,000. Project cars (running but rough) start around $8,000-$15,000. Stripped roller candidates can be had for $3,500-$8,000, but rust restoration on an R107 typically runs $15,000-$35,000 in body and structural repair alone before paint. Buy finished cars from competent specialists.

Did You Know?

The R107 SL platform launched in 1971 and ran continuously through 1989 β€” eighteen production years and over 237,000 units across all variants (350 SL, 380 SL, 420 SL, 450 SL, 500 SL, 560 SL). It is the single longest production run of any Mercedes-Benz body style ever produced. The 1973 launch year of the 450 SL in the US market was specifically designed to comply with the new 5-mph bumper regulations (FMVSS 215) that took effect for 1973 model year vehicles. Mercedes-Benz designed unique reinforced bumpers for US-market R107 cars that distinguish them visually from European-market "Euro-spec" cars (which retained the slimmer original bumpers throughout the production run). The M117 V8 engine that powered the 450 SL was developed as Mercedes-Benz's first all-new V8 since the 1968 introduction of the M116 (3.5L V8). The M117 architecture (4.5L initially, growing to 5.6L in late R107 cars) remained in production through 1991, powering everything from the 450 SEL 6.9 super-sedan to the 560 SEC coupe and eventually the 500 E sport sedan developed jointly with Porsche.

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