Elite Dealer

1949 Plymouth Special Deluxe

Michigan

$9,495

1949 Plymouth Special Deluxe

Vehicle Details

Make

Plymouth

Model

Special Deluxe

Year

1949

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

Flathead 6

Condition

Fair

Description

A genuine 1949 Plymouth Special Deluxe with the classic flathead 6 engine that runs. This is a clean-title, non-operational project that represents real potential for the right enthusiast. The car comes with a new aluminum radiator still in its box, ready to install.

The brake system needs work and the vehicle will benefit from some tender loving care to bring it back to full operating condition. This is an authentic piece of post-war American automotive history for the restorer willing to invest the time and effort. All mechanical and cosmetic details are intact for someone committed to a complete revival.

Plymouth Special Deluxe Buyer's Guide

Full guide
J
Jim Vasquez
Hot Rods
1939–1950
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Plymouth Special Deluxe was Chrysler's answer to the depression-era family car β€” honest, durable, and available with enough style that you didn't feel like you were settling. Today it represents the most accessible entry point into pre-war and early postwar American classics.
This guide covers
βœ“ 8-point inspection checklist
βœ“ Common issues & what to avoid
βœ“ In-person inspection guide
βœ“ Market pricing by year & condition
βœ“ 4 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Plymouth Special Market Overview

Based on 22 Plymouth Special listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

22
Listed Now
$31,063
Avg. Asking Price
1941–1950
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Below Average
This car: $9,495
Low: $5,495 High: $86,495
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 23%
Manual 55%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 9%
Good 18%
Fair 9% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 22 listings →
πŸ’°

What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1949 Plymouth Special Deluxe

Valuation Tool β†’

Plymouth Special Deluxe Buyer's Guide

Jim Vasquez here. The Plymouth Special Deluxe doesn't get the hot rod reverence of a Mercury Eight or the concours spotlight of a Lincoln Continental, but it has something neither of those cars can offer: accessibility. These were working-class cars when they were new, built to carry families rather than to impress, and they've aged into honest, affordable classics that reward the buyer who appreciates substance over status.

I have a specific appreciation for the Special Deluxe because the kustom culture that I love drew from every corner of early American cars β€” not just the premium brands. The Plymouth flathead six was tuned and customized by builders who didn't have Mercury money but had the same skills and the same dreams. Some of the most interesting early kustoms were built on Plymouths and DeSotos because the builders worked with what they had.

What to Check Before Buying

Lower Door Rust β€” Probe lower door skins and rocker panels β€” these rust consistently on pre-war and early postwar Plymouths.
Floor Pan Condition β€” Check floor pans from underneath and inside β€” corrosion at sill welds is common.
Flathead Six Cold Start β€” Start cold and watch for white or blue exhaust smoke β€” white smoke indicates coolant in combustion.
Head Gasket β€” Check oil for milky contamination and coolant for oil β€” head gasket integrity is the primary engine concern.
Brake System β€” Identify whether original cable, hydraulic, or upgraded brakes are fitted β€” verify function carefully.
Body Style Confirmation β€” Confirm the body style (Tudor, Fordor, club coupe, convertible) for accurate valuation.
Convertible Top (if applicable) β€” On club coupe models, inspect the top fabric and mechanism β€” replacement is expensive and specialist work.
Glass Completeness β€” Check all glass for cracks β€” curved pre-war glass is difficult and expensive to source.

Common Issues

Lower door skin and rocker panel rust on unrestored examples. Floor pan corrosion, especially at the door sill welds. Flathead six cracked heads from overheating events β€” replacement castings exist but require sourcing. Hydraulic brake system deterioration (pre-war cars may have cable brakes converted to hydraulic). Rubber seals and weatherstripping degradation. Convertible top mechanisms and fabric on club coupe models.

What to Look For

Inspect the lower body seams and door bottoms for rust β€” pre-war cars rust in these locations consistently. Check the floor pans and firewall area for corrosion. Verify the flathead six starts easily and runs without excessive smoke β€” a warm engine with white smoke from the exhaust suggests a cracked head or leaking gasket, which can be expensive on a 75+ year old casting. On convertible (club coupe) body styles, inspect the fabric top and the mechanism carefully. Verify the body style is correct β€” the pre-war Plymouth was available in multiple configurations.

Price Guide

1939–1942 Tudor sedan (pre-war): $6,000–$15,000 for drivers. Pre-war convertible/club coupe: $12,000–$28,000. 1946–1948 Special Deluxe: $5,000–$14,000. 1949–1950 sedan: $5,000–$13,000. Period-correct custom builds add significant premium depending on build quality. All-original, low-mileage examples command 25–40% premium.

Did You Know?

Plymouth was the third-best-selling car brand in America throughout most of the 1930s and 1940s, behind Ford and Chevrolet β€” a dominance most people don't remember because Plymouth faded dramatically in later decades. The 1939 Plymouth Special Deluxe was equipped with a "Safety-Rim" wheel design to prevent tire blowouts from causing immediate loss of control β€” Chrysler marketed this as a safety feature three decades before safety became a mainstream automotive selling point. The Plymouth flathead inline-six was so reliable that some taxi companies used these cars for over 500,000 miles on original engines.

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