What does a C4 Corvette cost in 2026?
The C4 Corvette spent most of the 2000s and 2010s as the unloved middle child of Corvette collecting — too new to be nostalgic, too old to be modern. That window has closed. The C4 is now a genuine classic, and the best examples are beginning to be recognized as such.
2026 C4 Corvette Pricing
- Base LT1 coupe (1992-1995, clean driver): $8,000–$16,000
- LT1 convertible (1986-1996): $12,000–$22,000
- Collector Edition (1982, glass roof): $14,000–$24,000
- 1986 Indy Pace Car replica: $15,000–$28,000
- ZR-1 (LT5 V8, 375-405 hp, 1990-1995): $22,000–$45,000
- Grand Sport (1996, only 1,000 built): $28,000–$55,000
The ZR-1 — The C4 Worth Collecting
The 1990-1995 ZR-1 "King of the Hill" used a Lotus-engineered LT5 all-aluminum V8 producing 375 hp (1990-1992) and then 405 hp (1993-1995). At the time, it was the most powerful American production car and one of the fastest in the world. The ZR-1 is wider than the base C4 (wider rear fenders and convex tail), runs to 60 mph in under 5 seconds, and is mechanically complex in ways that matter for maintenance budgets. These are the C4s that will be serious money in ten years.
The Grand Sport — The Rarest
The 1996 Grand Sport was Chevrolet's farewell to the C4: Admiral Blue with white stripe and red hash marks, 330 hp LT4 V8, only 1,000 produced. It's the most collectible non-ZR-1 C4 by a wide margin and is already approaching ZR-1 territory on the market.
What to Watch For
The C4's Achilles heel is the electronic dashboard — the early digital displays fail and replacements are getting harder to find. The LT1's Opti-Spark distributor requires attention (seal replacement is the preventive move on any LT1 over 80,000 miles). On ZR-1s: the LT5 requires a Corvette specialist — general mechanics are not equipped for it. Buy from a documented service history.