Elite Dealer

1980 Volkswagen Westfalia

$17,495

1980 Volkswagen Westfalia

Vehicle Details

Make

Volkswagen

Model

Westfalia

Year

1980

Mileage

64,000 miles

VIN

AMB1662

Body Type

Van

Transmission

Manual

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

2.0 Flat 4 Fuel Injected

Description

1980 Volkswagen Vanagon Westfalia camper van 64,000 actual miles factory air conditioning and cruise control 2.0 flat, four fuel injected engine. Please Note The Following **Vehicle Location is at our clients home and Not In Cadillac, Michigan. **We do have a showroom with about 25 cars that is by appointment only **Please Call First and talk to one of our reps at 231-468-2809 EXT 1 **

Volkswagen Westfalia Buyer's Guide

Full guide
E
Emily Chen
JDM Classics
1951–1991
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Volkswagen Westfalia is the original van life vehicle — a factory-built camper that has spawned a devoted global following and price tags that would surprise anyone who remembers when these were just cheap old campervans.
This guide covers
✓ 10-point inspection checklist
✓ Common issues & what to avoid
✓ In-person inspection guide
✓ Market pricing by year & condition
✓ 6 FAQs answered
✓ History & fun facts

Volkswagen Westfalia Market Overview

Based on 4 Volkswagen Westfalia listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

4
Listed Now
$23,745
Avg. Asking Price
1976–1985
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Below Average
This car: $17,495
Low: $8,995 High: $34,995
Transmission Distribution
Manual 100% ◄
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 4 listings →
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Volkswagen Westfalia Buyer's Guide

Before Instagram, before hashtags, before "van life" became a lifestyle brand, there was the Volkswagen Westfalia — a purpose-built camper van that offered freedom, simplicity, and a connection to the road that no modern RV can replicate. Built by the Westfalia-Werke coachbuilding firm in Germany and sold through VW dealers worldwide, these campers have become some of the most sought-after classic vehicles on the planet.

Emily Chen here, and I've followed this market closely for years. What strikes me most about Westfalia buyers is how clear-eyed they are — they know these vans are mechanically demanding, they know the prices are eye-watering, and they buy anyway. Because there is genuinely nothing else like it.

What to Check Before Buying

Underbody Rust Inspection — Get the van on a lift and inspect every lower seam, floor pan, and sill for rust perforation.
Pop-Top Canvas & Seals — Open and close the pop-top completely — check canvas condition, stitching, and seal integrity around the perimeter.
Floor Condition — Press on the floor around the sink and refrigerator — soft spots indicate water damage and potential rot.
Oil Cooler (T2) — Check the oil for milky discoloration indicating oil cooler cracks and coolant contamination.
Cooling System (T3) — On Vanagon models, check coolant color, smell, and oil filler for white emulsification — head gasket failure signs.
Valve Adjustment Record — Verify the air-cooled engine has been valve-adjusted within the last 3,000 miles — this is the most-neglected maintenance item.
Propane System — Test burners and inspect propane hoses for cracks or brittleness — replace any hose older than 10 years regardless of appearance.
Interior Originality — Confirm cabinetry is original to the build year — check hinges, latches, and veneer type against known reference photos.
Electrical System — Test all lights, the cabin fan, and the auxiliary battery (if fitted) — amateur wiring is common in these vans.
Engine Performance — Drive at highway speed — engine should pull steadily to 65 mph without overheating or misfiring.

Common Issues

Lower body seam and floor rust, especially around plumbing penetrations. Pop-top canvas deterioration from UV and water damage. Oil cooler cracks on air-cooled T2 engines (causes oil/coolant mixing). Wasserboxer head gasket failures on T3 models from cooling system air trapping. Valve clearance neglect on air-cooled engines (should be adjusted every 3,000 miles). Deteriorated pop-top seals allowing water into the roof lifting mechanism. Propane system leaks from aged hoses and fittings.

What to Look For

Verify rust-free body seams, especially the lower sill areas and around the pop-top canvas seal. Check the floor thoroughly for soft spots from water ingress — the area around the sink plumbing is particularly vulnerable. Inspect the interior cabinetry for originality; replaced or modified interiors reduce value significantly. On T2 models, verify the oil cooler isn't cracked (check for milky oil). On T3 models, inspect the coolant system carefully — check for head gasket failure signs including white exhaust smoke, sweet-smelling coolant, and milky oil. Confirm the pop-top mechanism works smoothly and the canvas is intact.

Price Guide

T1 Splitscreen Westfalias: $30,000–$120,000+ depending on condition and pop-top configuration. T2 Bay Window Westfalias (1968–1979): $25,000–$65,000 for good drivers, $70,000–$100,000+ for show-quality examples. T3 Vanagon Westfalias (1980–1991): $18,000–$40,000 standard; $30,000–$60,000+ for clean Syncros. Pop-top adds $4,000–$10,000 over equivalent hardtop. California/Pacific NW examples command 20–35% premium over rust-belt trucks.

Did You Know?

The Westfalia partnership with VW lasted from 1951 to 2003 — over 50 years of camper conversions. The iconic Westfalia "fridgebox" in early models didn't use electricity — it relied on the engine's heat to power an absorption-cycle cooler (the same technology as propane fridges). When VW introduced the T4 Eurovan in 1992, Westfalia briefly continued conversions, but the magic had faded. The T2 Bay Window is still manufactured in Brazil and Mexico with modern engines — parts compatibility makes classic maintenance easier than you'd expect.

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