This 2004 Volkswagen Phaeton W12 sold for just $625 per cylinder

Cars & Bids

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Abschreibungen. If Google Translate is to be believed, that’s German for “depreciation.”

Funny, I always thought it was Phaeton—but as it turns out, that’s French by way of ancient Greek for “vintage touring car,” and not “ultra-luxe W-12 VW sedan sells for 5.76-percent of inflation-adjusted MSRP on Cars and Bids.”

Well. I never was any good at foreign languages in school—let alone riting gud in Englush—but you learn something every day. Oh, I already knew the Phaeton was cheap, but $7445? Shoot, if anything goes awry—and that’s a hysterical inevitability with the Phaeton W-12—you could make that back and more if you part the car out.

Cars & Bids

Yes, it looks like the Phaeton takes its Bentley roots a bit too seriously. Like the Continental GT and Continental Flying Spur that share VW’s D1 platform, the Phaeton clearly presents an opportunity for your dollar to go a long way—just make sure there are plenty more where the first buck came from, as you never really pay off a W-12 Phaeton, you just transfer the loan note from the bank to your local VW specialist.

According to the Cars and Bids listing, this 2004 VW Phaeton originally sold new for $81,690, or around $130,000 adjusted for inflation at the time of this writing. Envisioned as a stealthy, comfort-oriented limo alternative to the sportier A8, the Bentley-based Phaeton never sold in healthy numbers aside from Germany and China, where enough moved to justify refreshes and updates until final discontinuation in 2016.

Cars & Bids

Just over 84,000 Phaetons sold globally, but only roughly 3400 moved into the States, and only 500 of those carried the wild 6.0-liter W-12 in place of the standard 4.2-liter V-8. Conceptually, they’re quite fascinating cars; VW Chairman Ferdinand Piëch decreed 10 engineering parameters to the development team that the nascent Phaeton must match prior to entering production. The full list isn’t public, but we know one of them was the car must be able to cruise at 186 mph with an exterior temperature of 122°F while the occupants relaxed in 72°F perfection.

It was over-engineered—scratch that, excessively engineered—without much thought to durability or serviceability. As a result, Phaetons are extraordinarily maintenance-intensive, and the costs do not reflect the Volkswagen badge on snout and tail. Cars and Bid’s example has managed to cover an impressive 180,000 miles since new, incurring over $50,000 in repairs since 2011 alone.

Cars & Bids

Even with that substantial investment, this Phaeton isn’t perfect. The sale notes a number of exterior scratches, dings, undercarriage rust, and wear present on interior trim. We don’t track Phaetons in the Hagerty Price Guide, but considering we maintain an average guaranteed value of $12,100 for our Phaeton policies in the U.S., this looks to be bought right in line with the market when taking into account condition and mileage.

Now, when are we going to see this type of depreciation in Golf Rs? If they perform anything like the first-gen R32, I’m screwed.

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Comments

    I own a 2004 V8 Phaeton, CouCou grey. Imported to Canada from the US in 2006. I live just outside of Edmonton, where we experience real winter. It has been one of the best vehicles I have ever owned. It now has 202,000 Kms on the odometer, and outside of routine maintenance as a consequence of age and use (tires, timing belt, brakes, HID bulbs) it has been, and continues to be, one of the most trouble-free vehicles I’ve ever owned. I am 77, and that history is over 30 sedans, sports cars, trucks and SUV’s. It is a daily driver, continues to draw attention everywhere I go, and has options not available on many new vehicles. If you love cars, and are prepared to properly maintain them, acquire a Phaeton. It is a dream to drive, in all weather and road conditions, and looks good doing it!!

    As a Phaeton owner myself, I will totally echo the sentiments of John’s experience above. Best driving car I’ve driven, quietest (more so than Lexus LS) very powerful and has proven trouble free. It would take 10,000 plus characters to list the features that all of them work perfect. I told my wife that a Bentley flying spur would set us back close to 3k a month with insurance and for 10% of that money, we can have essentially the same thing. I do my own work, nothing is too obscure and parts are available. So far after 2 years, oil changes, a battery (it takes 2) and tires. On the road at highways speeds, it gets 20mpg.

    Keep on saying they are a headache. We owners know the truth. Yes, if you take it to VW for a headlamp, they charge over 1000. Little did they know that the infotainment system has an electronic bulb change and adjust button and I did the job in 20 mins for 70 bucks. Go figure.

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