SOLD on Jun 15, 2026
Elite Dealer

1970 Oldsmobile Toronado

Michigan

$18,995

1970 Oldsmobile Toronado

Vehicle Details

Make

Oldsmobile

Model

Toronado

Year

1970

Mileage

105,000 miles

VIN

AMS46594

Body Type

Coupe

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

FWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Description

1970 Oldsmobile Toronado GT – 105,000 Miles – Solid Driver This 1970 Oldsmobile Toronado GT is a solid, well-preserved example of Oldsmobile’s distinctive front-wheel-drive luxury performance coupe. The car shows 105,000 miles, and the odometer is functional. Overall condition is described as good, with the car presenting as a solid driver.

It runs and drives well and would make an excellent classic to enjoy as-is while addressing a few noted items. Known needs and disclosures include: Passenger-side power window motor needs replacement A/C clutch is broken and will need replacement; the air-conditioning system itself remains intact, and the belt has been removed for the time being With its unique styling, GT package, and solid overall condition, this Toronado represents a great opportunity to own a comfortable and distinctive 1970s classic with strong presence and originality.

Classic Oldsmobile Toronado Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1966–1978
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Expert buyer's guide to the Oldsmobile Toronado 1966–1978. FWD chain-drive inspection, unique drivetrain diagnosis, body rust, and pricing for the iconic first-generation fastback.
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

Oldsmobile Toronado Market Overview

Based on 15 Oldsmobile Toronado listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

15
Listed Now
$17,589
Avg. Asking Price
1966–1984
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $18,995
Low: $4,995 High: $41,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 87% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 7%
Good 7%
Fair 20%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 15 listings →

Classic Oldsmobile Toronado Buyer's Guide

The 1966 Oldsmobile Toronado was the most technically ambitious American car of its decade. Front-wheel drive, a 385-horsepower 425 cubic-inch V8, and a stunning fastback body that looked like nothing else in Olds showrooms — it arrived fully formed as a genuine technological statement. The chain-drive front-wheel-drive system predated modern FWD technology by nearly two decades, and its complexity is exactly what buyers need to understand before writing a check. When the drivetrain is right, the Toronado is a magnificent driver. When it's been neglected, the repair bill can exceed the car's market value.

What to Check Before Buying

Chain Drive Noise Test — Start engine and listen at idle from the front driver's side for chain rattling or slapping. Noise warrants specialist inspection before any purchase.
CV Joint Check — Drive at low speed and turn steering to full lock both ways. Clicking or grinding from the front axle indicates worn CV joints.
ATF Condition — Pull the ATF dipstick and examine fluid color and smell. Dark or burned fluid with metal particles indicates drivetrain wear.
Front Inner Wheel Well Rust — Inspect front inner wheel well structure for rust in the FWD suspension mounting areas. Structural rust here is more complex to repair than on conventional cars.
Headlight Door Operation — Operate hidden headlight doors through full cycle. Hesitation or incomplete travel means actuator wear; replacements are scarce.
Cowl Seam — Inspect the cowl seam at the windshield base from under the hood. Standard GM rust point.
Rocker Panels — Run a magnet along the full length of both rockers. Filler is non-magnetic. Check for perforation at the rocker-to-quarter junction.
Floor Pan Condition — Probe floor pans from underneath. Full-size platform is more resistant to floor rot but long-term neglect catches up.
Engine Idle Quality — A healthy 425 or 455 Rocket idles smoothly and quietly. Rough idle, oil smoke, or blowby warrants compression testing.
Power Accessories — Test all power windows, seats, and locks. Aging GM electrical gremlins are common — non-functional accessories are a negotiating point.

Common Issues

Chain drive stretch and tensioner wear is the primary mechanical concern — chain service costs $1,500–$3,000 at a Toronado specialist and is essential for any car with deferred maintenance. Front CV joint wear produces clicking at full steering lock. The Turbo-Hydramatic 425 is robust but requires specialist knowledge. Body rust follows standard GM full-size patterns: cowl seam, rockers, lower quarters. Hidden headlight door actuators fail with age and replacements are hard to source.

What to Look For

Start the engine and listen for chain noise from the front driver's side at idle — rattling or slapping indicates chain stretch or tensioner wear. Drive at low speed and turn to full lock both ways; clicking from the front axle means worn CV joints. Check ATF for metal particles and discoloration. Inspect the front inner wheel wells for structural rust around the FWD suspension geometry. Check the body for standard GM rust points: cowl seam, rocker panels, lower quarters, floor pans. Inspect the hidden headlight doors for proper operation — replacement doors are expensive and scarce.

Price Guide

First-gen 1966–1967 driver: $18,000–$30,000. First-gen 1968–1970: $14,000–$24,000. Show-quality restored first-gen: $40,000–$60,000. Second-gen 1971–1974: $10,000–$18,000. Second-gen 1975–1978: $7,000–$14,000. Deduct heavily for any car with known chain drive issues — a full chain drive service and CV joint work can run $3,000–$5,000 combined, and a fully neglected drivetrain costs significantly more to restore.

Did You Know?

The Toronado was Motor Trend Car of the Year for 1966 — the first FWD American car to win that award. Oldsmobile chief engineer John Beltz personally championed the project against significant internal GM resistance. The chain drive uses a Morse Hy-Vo silent chain — the same basic technology used in oil pump drives — scaled up to transmit V8 torque to the front wheels.

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