Elite Dealer

1969 Volkswagen Karmann Ghia

Michigan

$33,995

1969 Volkswagen Karmann Ghia

Vehicle Details

Make

Volkswagen

Model

Karmann Ghia

Year

1969

Mileage

35,000 miles

Transmission

Manual

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

1776cc

Condition

Good

Description

This 1969 Karmann Ghia is a purposeful restomod that respects the original while embracing modern reliability. The standout feature is a meticulously blueprinted 1776cc engine with approximately 35,000 miles, paired with a four-speed transmission fitted with a Hurst trigger shifter for crisp gear changes. Power comes through dual 40mm Kadron Solex carburetors backed by Pertronics electronic ignition.

The chassis has been thoroughly refreshed with rebuilt front end components, Bilstein shocks all around, new front disc brakes, and a custom gas-charged rear hatch lift system. Visual upgrades include louvered hood and bonnet vents, frenched antenna, pop-out rear windows, rare adjustable bucket seats with headrests, and Porsche Fuch replica five-lug wheels wearing a de-chromed body and Cal-look window trim. A custom single-piece dash houses full gauges.

This Ghia strikes the balance between period-correct style and driving enjoyment.

Volkswagen Karmann Ghia Buyer's Guide

Full guide
E
Emily Chen
JDM Classics
1955–1974
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Karmann Ghia is the proof that beautiful design and honest engineering are not mutually exclusive — a hand-built body by Ghia of Turin on the proven Beetle platform, producing the most elegant Volkswagen ever made and one of the most practical classics available today.
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

Volkswagen Karmann Ghia Market Overview

Based on 9 Volkswagen Karmann Ghia listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

9
Listed Now
$27,573
Avg. Asking Price
1965–1974
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $33,995
Low: $15,495 High: $45,495
Transmission Distribution
Manual 100% ◄
Condition Distribution
Good 22% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 9 listings →
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Volkswagen Karmann Ghia Buyer's Guide

Emily Chen here. The Karmann Ghia is the car that convinced me the VW air-cooled platform was genuinely interesting, rather than just reliably dull. The Beetle underneath is the same car — flat-four air-cooled engine, torsion bar suspension, the same basic engineering that sold 21 million units — but the Ghia body transforms the experience. Not the performance, which remains modest in the extreme. The experience: the way the car looks, the way it sits, the craftsmanship visible in the panel fit, the sense that you're driving something that was made with care rather than just made.

Ghia designed the body; Karmann of Osnabrück hand-built it — hammering the complex curved panels over forms that couldn't be press-stamped at Volkswagen's production scale. The result is a car with panel surfaces that still reward close inspection 50 years later. That's a manufacturing accomplishment worth understanding.

What to Check Before Buying

Floor Pan Rust — Inspect underside with a probe — floor pan rust is the most common structural issue.
Heater Channel Condition — Probe the front heater channels running under the body sides — structural rust here is expensive.
Rear Quarter Panels — Check where rear quarters meet the lower body — consistent rust point on all Karmann Ghias.
Valve Noise — Listen for excessive valve clatter at idle — indicates overdue valve adjustment, a routine but essential service.
Cabriolet Top Seal — On cabriolets, check rear tub and sills for water intrusion damage from top seal failures.
Panel Fit Assessment — Examine door gaps and rear quarter transitions — crude panel alignment indicates prior accident repair.
Engine Oil Condition — Check oil color and level — clean oil on a Karmann Ghia indicates recent service and attentive ownership.
Electrical Function — Test all lights and the horn — Bosch electrical components age predictably and basic function is a maintenance indicator.

Common Issues

Floor pan rust — universal on cars without regular underside protection. Front heater channel rust — structural and expensive to repair correctly. Rear quarter panel rust at lower body join. Sill area deterioration. Valve adjustment neglect causing noisy top end — a straightforward but interval-specific maintenance item. Cabriolet top seal deterioration causing water intrusion and interior damage. Electrical system failures from Bosch components of the era. Type 34 parts availability challenges on the larger-platform variant.

What to Look For

The floor pan is the primary structural inspection — inspect from underneath with a probe. The front heater channels (structural aluminum channels running along the bottom of the body) are the most critical: rust in these channels is expensive to repair correctly. The rear quarter panels rust where they meet the lower body. Sill areas at the door openings are the third location. Verify the air-cooled flat-four runs without excessive valve noise — the hydraulic lifter equivalent is absent here, and valve adjustment at specific intervals is required. On cabriolets, inspect the top mechanisms for function and the rear tub area for water intrusion damage from a poorly sealing top.

Price Guide

1955–1959 Karmann Ghia coupe (driver): $12,000–$22,000. 1960–1969 coupe: $10,000–$20,000. 1970–1974 coupe: $12,000–$24,000. Any year cabriolet: $22,000–$45,000. Type 34 coupe (1962–1969): $18,000–$40,000. Show-quality original cabriolets: $45,000–$70,000+. Rust-free California or Arizona cars command 30–50% premium over comparable eastern examples.

Did You Know?

The Karmann Ghia was produced for 19 years — 1955 to 1974 — and over 362,000 coupes and 80,000 cabriolets were built. Despite this production volume, the hand-forming process meant that no two bodies were perfectly identical, and the panel quality on original-paint survivors still rewards close inspection. The car was never sold with a performance claim — Volkswagen's advertising emphasized its beauty rather than its speed, once running an ad that simply said: "It's ugly but it gets you there" over an image of the Ghia to illustrate the contrast.

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