Should You Care About Corvette Pace Cars?

Mecum

If the Indy 500 is “the greatest spectacle in racing,” serving as pace car for the race must be a marketing goldmine.

After all, a pace car is basically a rolling advertisement, driven on parade laps by a celebrity or famous athlete, and subsequently leading the procession of thundering, eager racers around the Brickyard to the green flag and during caution periods. It’s a lofty endorsement of the car’s worthiness to be on track at the same time as the real competitors. The winning driver even gets a pace car as a prize. Naturally, carmakers squeeze as much publicity out of the pace car glamour as possible. They continue that squeeze even after the race is over, offering limited edition replicas of the pace car, sprayed and stickered to look just like the ones used at Indy.

But are pace cars special just because marketing departments say they are? Do collectors buy into the “limited edition” cachet? How does the market treat them? Let’s dive into the history and explore the data.

1978 corvette indy pace car graphics
Mecum

Within the world of Indy pace car replicas there are DeSotos, Mustangs, Camaros, Firebirds, and even Fieros. Traditionally, the cars are decked out with graphics, decals, and loud paint until they’re about as subtle as a forest fire. The king of these “pace car editions,” though, is America’s sports car—the Corvette.

The Indy 500 had been around for nearly seven decades by the time Corvette was first chosen to pace the event in 1978. After that late start, though, America’s sports car has gotten more pace laps under its belt at Indy than any other model. This year, when an E-Ray will lead the field, marks the 21st time that a Corvette has served as pace car for the Indy 500.

C3 Pace Car Rear Three-Quarter
GM

The 1978 pace car wasn’t simply the start of Corvettes pacing the 500; it established a tradition of pace car collecting. Though Corvette celebrated its 25th anniversary in 1978, and the model got a new fastback rear end as well as a new interior, all the attention was on the pace car replica, a limited edition finished in black and silver with Indy 500 graphics. What was originally supposed to be a small batch for public consumption quickly ballooned to about one car for every Chevrolet dealer in the country. Pace car replicas comprised about 15 percent of Corvette production for the whole year.

In the end, GM built 6502 pace cars for ’78. An article in The Wall Street Journal titled “Few Want to Drive This Car, but Many Are Eager to Buy It,” touting the potential of the pace car to become a valuable collectors’ item and prompted people to snatch up ’78 pace cars for well over MSRP. Customers stuffed the cars into storage and waited for that sweet, sweet ROI.

Choosing which automobiles to buy as investments is never a sure thing, and nobody ever got rich off of ’78 Corvettes. However, Chevrolet has still released an official pace car replica for many (though not all) of the years a Corvette has paced Indy. After 1978, a few years passed before Corvette again got the honors in 1986. Chevrolet didn’t introduce a separate pace car replica but instead sold all 7315 Corvette convertibles in 1986 with Indy 500 decals, and it was up to the owner whether to apply them or not. In 1995 another Corvette convertible paced the 500, but Chevrolet again produced a separate model, this time painted in a brash purple and white and with a production total limited to just 527 units. The 1998 Corvette pace car is among the more famous, due to its almost painful combination of purple and yellow. Chevrolet built 1163 of them. The only other years in which Chevrolet sold a significant official run of pace car replicas to the public were 2007 and 2008, with 500 built for each year.

Relatively limited production and loud paint typically mean that pace car replicas sell for a decent premium over the equivalent base car, but the differences vary.

For 1978 pace cars, the difference from a base model is purely cosmetic, but the changes are significant. In addition to the paint job, each car got a full silver interior, better seats, glass T-tops, and alloy wheels. Even 46 years after all the hype, and despite not being that rare, a ’78 pace car is still worth significantly more than a “normal” ’78 Vette. Pace cars equipped with the range-topping L82 engine carry a condition #2 (“excellent”) value of $41,300, which is over 60 percent higher than a base car.

As for 1986 pace cars, things are a little different. Like the ’78 models, they’re not that rare—Chevrolet built 7315 over a quarter of production for the year. They also weren’t technically a limited edition, as all ’87 Corvette convertibles are “pace cars.” People selling one will often tout it as a “1986 Pace Car Edition,” when what they really mean is “1986 Corvette convertible.” Nevertheless, 1986 marked the first Corvette convertible since 1975, and 1986 convertibles command a slight premium over 1987 convertibles, with condition #2 values of $23,500 and $21,300, respectively.

For the purple-and-white 1995 Pace Car Convertible, production was much more limited with 527 built. Yet the premium for them isn’t huge. The condition #3 (“good”) value is $14,500 compared to $11,500 for the base car, but its #2 value of $27,800 is within a few hundred dollars of the base. The purple-and-yellow look-at-me-mobile that is the 1998 pace car also doesn’t cost all that much more than a base ’98 soft top. Its $32,800 condition #2 value is just 6.5 percent higher.

Corvette paced the 500 again in 2002, just ahead of the car’s 50th birthday in 2003. Chevrolet sold thousands of “50th Anniversary Edition” cars for the ’03 model year, all finished in a special shade of Anniversary Red Metallic over Shale two-tone leather. But Chevrolet also offered an “Indy 500 pace car” decal package to Anniversary Edition buyers for about $500. That’s a lot of money for some stickers, but they actually turned out to be a decent investment, as cars wearing them carry a #2 value of $37,100 compared to $33,000 for a regular ’03 50th Anniversary Edition.

The 2007 and 2008 Indy Pace Car replicas number 500 examples each. The ’07 Indy Pace Car Convertible carries a #2 value of $37,300 (11 percent higher than a base car), and the 2008 Indy Pace Car Coupe carries a #2 value of $42,400 (13 percent higher than a base car).

In addition to the pace car replicas you could buy at the dealer, there are the actual pace cars used for the race, which are naturally more desirable. There are also “track cars” (used by race officials and VIPs for the event) and “festival cars” (used in the Indianapolis 500 Festival Parade) that are often similar to the dedicated pace car. When the festival or track cars aren’t given out to execs or VIPs or otherwise come up for sale, they can be even more sought after by collectors than the production replicas. Some collectors are so crazy about pace cars that, for years when GM didn’t sell an official replica, they commission their own with special permission from Indianapolis Motor Speedway.

Sale prices for all of the above, though, are mixed. For example, one of three official pace cars used at the 2004 Indy 500 sold at auction last year for $38,500 and one of the Parade Cars from that year sold this January for $40,700, both of which seem low. As does the $59,400 for the 2019 Parade Car driven by Alexander Rossi. There are 2019 Corvettes on used car lots asking more than that. On the other end of the spectrum, a parade car from the 2005 race sold for $132,000 at auction this month, and one of the six official pace cars for the 2006 race sold for $242,000 at auction last year.

corvette indy pace car collection
Mecum

Since pace cars are sought out by collectors, they are sometimes sold as a collection. Back in 2018, a pace car collection of 16 Corvettes sold for $1.6M, which works out to an even $100K apiece. Which is a lot, but the group included four official track-used cars and five replicas that were commissioned by the owner and authorized by Indianapolis Motor Speedway because no official replicas were offered for those years. Another group of 18 sold at auction two years ago for $1.375M, or over $76,000 apiece. That group included two real pace cars used at the race and eight Indy-authorized replicas.

Corvette pace cars, then, are proven collectibles. They have been for over 40 years. They’re often not that rare. Their paint is often gaudy. They’re not any faster than a mechanically identical base model. But their connection to the greatest spectacle in racing, and their uniqueness, negates all that. The prices don’t lie, and we should indeed care about pace cars.

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Comments

    Lol when I first saw them I thought they were an L.A. Lakers special edition of some sort. Maybe a tribute to Magic or Kareem. It really was hideous.

    The Fiero Pace Car was a real pace car. It was modified with a larger engine and a roof top air scoop. The rules stated that the pace Car had to accelerate off the 4th turn at 140 mph+ which the Fiero did easily. That was what a Fiero should have been for sale to the public. That engine is used in current 4-cylinder race cars and easily produces 400 HP. The replicas were saddled with the 90 HP 4 cylinder engines, barely able to reach 90 MPH. Too bad that Chevy was able to get GM to pull the plug on the Pontiac before killing it completely. By the way, that Fiero Pace Car was faster than the car that won the race in 1955.

    Pontiac should have had a home run with the Fiero. But dropping 90HP into a two seater with a screaming chicken on the hood was pathetic. If they would have went with a V-6 standard with at least 140HP from the very beginning they would have had a classic on their hands.

    Rich Soule, I agree he has nice cars but never been to the museum.

    I tried talking to him and his team at a Georgetown airport car show a few years back about his recently purchased Superbird but they were not interested in talking about the car.

    Imo they just buy high dollar cars but know very little about them and could care less about the “real car guy” who wants to talk about them.

    Just my $0.02.

    Imo the 78 Pace car and the 67 camaro pace car are the best imo.

    68-73 best looking then they ****ed the back end and put the 100 hp pos motor in it finally the c4 got us out of that malaise

    Is it me? That overhead shot made the C8 pace car look humongous compared virtually every other car in that shot.

    i was a kid when the C5 came out, and i’d always pick up the car classifieds when i went to Jewel-Osco with my mom. there was a pace car C5 that was listed for like 60k+ when the others were all listed for 40-50k. over the next few months i watched it drop to 60, 55, 50, etc until it was listed for less than a regular Corvette. nobody wanted that monstrosity. at 8 years old even i knew it was gaudy. that’s been my understanding of pace cars ever since.

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