Elite Dealer

1953 Mercury Monterey

$35,995

1953 Mercury Monterey

Vehicle Details

Make

Mercury

Model

Monterey

Year

1953

Mileage

51,000 miles

VIN

AMS37190

Body Type

Coupe

Transmission

Automatic

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

4.2L 255 V8

Description

1953 Mercury Monterey Luxury. Are you looking for a classic car that combines style, performance, and personality? Look no further than this 1953 Mercury Monterey, a rare and beautiful gem that will turn heads wherever you go. This Monterey is in excellent condition, with a smooth-running 255 V8 engine, an automatic transmission, power steering, and a stunning Yosemite Yellow exterior over a black/yellow two-tone interior.

It has plenty of features that make it stand out, such as the fender skirts, full wheel covers, wide whitewall tires, and the AM radio. But the most unique and eye-catching feature is the Devil Head Steering Wheel, an extremely rare accessory that Mercury collectors all look for. It also adds a touch of devilish charm to this heavenly ride.

This car has been well-maintained and cared for by its previous owner for 36 years, who only sold it to us if we promised to preserve the cars originality. It has a clean title and low mileage, and it is ready to hit the road with a new owner who will appreciate its beauty and history. Don’t miss this opportunity to own a piece of American automotive history, and a car that will make you feel like a star.

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 **

Mercury Monterey Buyer's Guide

Full guide
J
Jim Vasquez
Hot Rods
1952–1974
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Mercury Monterey gave the custom culture its most iconic raw material in the 1952–1956 era, and then reinvented itself as a serious big-block performer with the 427 FE engine in the 1960s. Two completely different collector cars wearing the same badge.
This guide covers
✓ 8-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 4 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Mercury Monterey Market Overview

Based on 36 Mercury Monterey listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

36
Listed Now
$29,032
Avg. Asking Price
1941–1970
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $35,995
Low: $5,995 High: $89,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 64% ◄
Manual 14%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 6%
Good 8%
Fair 3%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 36 listings →
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Mercury Monterey Buyer's Guide

Jim Vasquez here. When people talk about the "'51 Mercury," they usually mean any early-1950s Merc — and the Monterey is the car they mean. It was Mercury's top trim level for most of its run, the version that came with the most chrome, the best interior, and the proportions that George Barris, the Ayala brothers, and a hundred backyard customizers attacked with lead sleds and lowering blocks. The 1952–1956 Monterey is custom culture's favorite canvas.

But the Monterey story doesn't end in the 1950s. By 1966, Mercury was dropping the 427ci FE big block into the Monterey — a NASCAR-derived engine in a full-size cruiser. Same name, completely different animal. Two very different cars for two very different collectors.

What to Check Before Buying

Lower Door Rust (1952–1956) — Probe lower door skins and sills — standard failure locations on all early Ford-family cars.
Flathead Block Integrity — On 1952–1953 flathead cars, verify no cooling system history of overheating — cracked blocks are a known risk.
Sun Valley Plexiglas — On 1954 Sun Valley, inspect the roof Plexiglas for cracks and yellowing — replacement is expensive and difficult.
427 FE Documentation — On claimed 427 cars, verify engine codes against broadcast sheet or VIN documentation — clones exist.
Trunk Floor Rust — Check trunk pan for water intrusion rust — common on all full-size Mercurys of any era.
Power Window Circuits — Test all power windows through full travel — connector corrosion causes common failures.
FE Carburetor Condition — Cold start and warm idle on 390/427 FE — varnished carbs from sitting are standard on undriven cars.
Exhaust Manifolds — Listen for ticking at cold start — FE manifold cracks are common on high-mileage examples.

Common Issues

Lower door rust and floor pan corrosion on 1952–1956 cars. Flathead V8 overheating and block cracking if cooling system has been neglected. Sun Valley Plexiglas roof yellowing and cracking — extremely difficult to source correct replacements. Mid-1960s power window circuit failures. 427 FE documentation absent on claimed original cars — clone risk. 390 FE carburetor varnish on long-stored cars. Exhaust manifold cracks on high-mileage FE engines. 1971–1974 trunk floor rust from water intrusion through aging seals.

What to Look For

On 1952–1956 Montereys, inspect the lower door skins, sill areas, and floor pans — standard rust locations on any early Ford-family car. The flathead V8 in 1952–1953 cars is prone to cracked blocks from overheating — verify the cooling system has been maintained and the block has been magna-fluxed if there's any doubt. On the Sun Valley (1954), inspect the Plexiglas roof insert for cracks and yellowing — replacement is difficult and expensive. On 1966–1967 claimed 427 FE cars, verify the engine codes against the VIN and any available broadcast sheet documentation — a transplanted 427 has no performance provenance. On any full-size Monterey, inspect the rear trunk floor for water intrusion rust and check the power window circuits for connector corrosion.

Price Guide

1952–1953 Monterey flathead V8 (driver): $12,000–$25,000. 1954–1956 Monterey Y-block (driver): $10,000–$22,000. 1954 Sun Valley Plexiglas (original): $25,000–$50,000. 1966–1967 Monterey 390ci: $9,000–$20,000. 1966–1967 Monterey factory 427ci (documented): $28,000–$55,000. 1968–1970 Monterey 429ci: $8,000–$18,000. 1971–1974 Monterey: $5,000–$12,000. Custom-built early Montereys (show quality): $30,000–$150,000+ depending on builder and provenance.

Did You Know?

The 1954 Mercury Monterey Sun Valley with its transparent Plexiglas roof insert was one of America's first production cars with a factory sunroof concept — and it was discontinued after one year because the greenhouse heat made summer driving unbearable. The Hirohata Merc — the most famous custom car ever built, completed by the Barris shop in 1952 — used a 1951 Mercury as its base, one year before the Monterey name arrived. The 427ci FE engine offered in the 1966–1967 Monterey was the same engine winning Le Mans and Daytona for Ford during those years — making the full-size Monterey the only family-car-sized vehicle that shared an engine with Le Mans winners.

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