1963 Plymouth Valiant

Edmonton, Alberta

$2,500

1963 Plymouth Valiant

Vehicle Details

Make

Plymouth

Model

Valiant

Year

1963

Body Type

Convertible

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

225 Cubic Inch Slant-6

Condition

Fair

Description

This 1963 Plymouth Valiant convertible presents a genuine restoration opportunity for someone ready to bring a classic back to life. The 225-cubic-inch Slant-6 engine paired with the original push-button automatic transmission represents the practical engineering that made Valiants such capable daily drivers in their era. The convertible top mechanism is there to be restored, and the body shows its age honestly—exactly what you'd expect from a project car with real potential.

The Slant-6 is known for durability and simplicity, making it ideal for someone who wants a rewarding hands-on restoration without overwhelming complexity. Current mileage reflects the car's honest history. This is a solid foundation for an enthusiast ready to do the work and emerge with a charming piece of early sixties Mopar heritage that still turns heads at local cars and coffee events.

Classic Plymouth Valiant Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1960–1976
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Expert buyer's guide to the Plymouth Valiant 1960–1976. Slant Six durability, fender tag decoding, A-body rust inspection, Scamp and Duster variants, and current market pricing.
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

Plymouth Valiant Market Overview

Based on 9 Plymouth Valiant listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

9
Listed Now
$17,564
Avg. Asking Price
1961–1972
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $2,500
Low: $2,500 High: $44,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 78% ◄
Condition Distribution
Good 22%
Fair 33% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 9 listings →
💰

What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1963 Plymouth Valiant

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Classic Plymouth Valiant Buyer's Guide

The Plymouth Valiant was Chrysler's compact answer to the Falcon and Corvair — and it turned out to be the most durable of the three. Powered by the legendary Slant Six engine, the Valiant earned a reputation for reliability that bordered on the monotonous. These engines simply did not die. Today the Valiant is one of the most accessible classic Mopars on the market: inexpensive to buy, cheap to run, with a passionate community behind it. The Signet, Scamp, and Duster variants add variety; the V8-swapped cars offer real performance. What you need to watch for are the unibody rust patterns specific to the A-body Chrysler platform — because this is where Valiants die.

What to Check Before Buying

Fender Tag Decode — Locate and photograph the fender tag on the inner front fender. It lists the complete original build specification — body code, engine, transmission, color.
K-Frame Inspection — Get underneath and inspect the torsion bar crossmember and lower K-frame for rust. Structural rot here is a serious and expensive repair.
Lower Torque Box Rust — Check the lower torque boxes where the floor meets the front frame rails. Chrysler unibody rot at the torque boxes is common and requires welding.
Floor Pan Probe — Probe the driver-side floor pan from underneath with a screwdriver. Heat and condensation cause floor rot at the driver footwell first.
Rear Quarter Check — Run a magnet along the lower rear quarters and wheel well lips. Filler is non-magnetic. Rust here is cosmetic but needs addressing.
Trunk Floor — Pull up the trunk mat and inspect the trunk floor and spare tire well for rust-through or prior patch work.
Intake Manifold Gasket — On Slant Six cars, check for coolant staining around the intake manifold. Check the oil dipstick for milky residue indicating coolant intrusion.
Engine Idle Quality — A healthy 225 Slant Six idles smoothly and quietly. Rough idle or vacuum leaks at the manifold are common on older gaskets.
Torsion Bar Adjusters — Check torsion bar adjustment bolts at the front crossmember for corrosion and seizure. Seized adjusters complicate alignment work.
Scamp Hardtop Seals — On Scamp hardtops, check the B-pillar area and rear window seals for water intrusion damage to the interior and floor.

Common Issues

Torsion bar K-frame rust is the most serious structural issue — a badly rotted K-frame requires replacement or major welding and is a four-figure repair. Floor pan rust from driver-side heat and condensation is universal on unprotected cars. Rear quarter and wheel well rust is common. Chrysler A-body lower torque box rot (where the floor pan meets the front frame rails) requires professional welding to repair properly. Slant Six intake manifold gasket failures cause coolant leaks and vacuum leaks — budget $300–$600 for a proper manifold reseal. Torsion bar adjustment bolts corrode — seized adjusters complicate front end alignment work.

What to Look For

Decode the fender tag on the inner front fender to confirm original build specification. Inspect the torsion bar crossmember (K-frame) and lower torque boxes from underneath — structural rust here is a serious problem unique to the Chrysler unibody. Probe the driver-side floor pan from underneath. Check the rear quarter wheel wells and lower quarter panels with a magnet for filler. Inspect the trunk floor and spare tire well for rust-through. On Slant Six cars, check the intake manifold gasket area for coolant leaks. Pull the dipstick and check for milky oil (coolant in oil). Look for cracked or missing torsion bar adjusters at the front crossmember.

Price Guide

Four-door Slant Six driver: $4,000–$10,000. Two-door coupe Slant Six: $7,000–$15,000. Signet and Scamp hardtops: $12,000–$22,000. V8-equipped two-door: $12,000–$20,000. Show-quality restored Scamp: $20,000–$32,000. First-gen 1960–1962 original condition: $12,000–$22,000. Values remain modest compared to Barracudas and Darts — the Valiant is the budget entry point into the Chrysler A-body collector market.

Did You Know?

The Valiant was the first unibody compact sold by any of the Big Three American manufacturers. It debuted at the British International Motor Show at Earls Court, London, in October 1959. The 225 Slant Six was known as the "leaning tower of power" and powered millions of American vehicles from 1960 through 1987. Chrysler taxicabs running the 225 Slant Six routinely exceeded 300,000 miles in fleet service.

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