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Was This Plymouth’s Plummet from $1.65M to $418K a Reality Check?
Bird, it seems, is not the word. At least it wasn’t at the Mecum auction in Indianapolis last weekend. There, a Tor Red 1970 Plymouth Superbird sold for $418,000. It’s a solid number at first glance, quite close to what one of these high-flying Hemis is worth in our price guide.
But if you look a little into this car’s history, you’ll see that it sold for a record-breaking $1.65M just three years ago. Ouch. What happened?

Plymouth Superbird history actually starts with Dodge. Aiming to put the Charger at the front of the field in NASCAR racing in 1969, Dodge gave its Charger R/T heavily reshaped bodywork with a gigantic pointed nose and ludicrously tall rear wing. In a not-so-subtle nod to its NASCAR intentions, the new winged wonder was named the Daytona. For homologation purposes, Dodge built 503 total Charger Daytonas, and one of the racing versions was the first thing in NASCAR to hit the 200-mph barrier.
The Superbird, based on the Road Runner, was Plymouth’s follow-up to the Daytona a year later. Slightly refined but largely similar, it was the car to beat in the 1970 season. The series banned these “aero cars” for ’71, though, so the Superbird’s flight was short-lived.

Its time in the showroom was short-lived, too, but not as successful. By the time the Superbird debuted, homologation rules changed from 500 cars total (as with the Daytona) to one car produced for every two dealerships. For Plymouth, that meant nearly 2000 Superbirds. It may have looked just like the car you saw winning at Talladega, but as a street car it looked ridiculous, even cartoonish, with those massive Road Runner decals. It was impractical given the length of its overhangs, and it was expensive to buy and to insure as rates started to hit the muscle car market hard. Superbirds were a hard sell, and there are tales of cars languishing on dealer lots until 1972.
But that was then. As classic cars today, the ridiculousness of the Daytona/Superbird twins is part of their appeal for Mopar maniacs. The race history is, too, and practicality isn’t much of a concern, either. These days, nobody is parallel parking a Superbird and trying not to bash in that giant schnoz.
Of the nearly 2000 Superbirds built, just 135 left the factory with the range-topping 426-cubic-inch/425-horsepower Hemi. A little more than half (77) came with a TorqueFlite automatic. The rest got a 440-ci V-8 of either 375- or 390-hp output. Generally, colors can make a big difference in Superbird prices, and four-speed cars can command about 10% more than their self-shifting peers. In our price guide, Superbird values peaked in 2023, then dropped and have been flat for the past year, though they’re still comfortably higher than they were pre-pandemic.



The car sold at Indy, chassis RM23R0A172589, is a nicely restored and genuine Hemi car, and one of the 77 equipped with an automatic. When we saw it up close at Barrett-Jackson in 2022, it was the star of the sale and looked fantastic other than a few blemishes and cracks on the nose, as well as a few chips on the hood. But even if it had been better than perfect, the $1.5M winning bid ($1.65M with premium) was beyond top dollar for a Superbird at the time.
It was also (still is, actually) the most anyone ever paid for a Superbird at auction, squashing the previous record of $990K set a few months earlier. It was even higher than the then-$1.32M record for a Charger Daytona, which is a much rarer and typically more expensive car. Even in the super-heated pandemic-boom market of mid-2022, this was an extreme case of auction exuberance.
At the time, we called the result an “attention-getting outlier,” and it looks like we were right. No other sale since then has come close.
The buyer, car collector Bobby Knudsen, sadly passed away last year. His collection sold at Indy, featuring several mouthwatering muscle cars and historic drag racers, among them not one but two Pontiac Catalina “Swiss Cheese” cars. The ex-Jim Wangers one brought a very strong $742,500. The Superbird, however, flew lower at $418K. It even brought less than another clean Hemi/automatic car, this one finished in Lemon Twist (yellow), which sold for $605K.
If a $1.232M drop in price sounds drastic, that’s because it is. But that doesn’t mean muscle cars or even Superbirds specifically are crashing. As mentioned above, $418K is close enough to what other Superbirds have sold for recently, and although their values are down from their peak a few years ago, the huge gap in prices for this one is mostly down to it flying way too high in 2022, and then coming back down to earth in 2025.

I knew a lady that bought a superbird back in the early seventies and I don’t think she kept it very long.
Was she from Pasadena?
Well, it’s the same old story…what are you buying? An investment? An old memory? Something fun to drive? If it’s something enjoyable to drive, then I wouldn’t worry about the money aspect…unless it affects your Hagerty premium. If you looking for an investment, the vehicles that don’t flucuate much in value over time, have a tendency to be very rare, and consequently, very, very expensive to start with. Otherwise, put you hard earned $$$ in the market…it’s better move. If you’re purchasing because that vehicle provides enjoyment…who cares…? It’ll change with the times. That’s pretty much guaranteed.
I spent 30 years working car auctions as a buyer. When you get a couple of Big Dogs (Big Egos) with a lot of money, that have had a few drinks at a car auction, common sense flies out the window. Imho the Superbird at 1.6 was an outlier.
Personally I’m glad to see the values drop. The inflated market has gotten so ridiculous that it has put many a classic car out of reach for us regular guys.
Collecting cars is like collecting old paintings, beauty is in the eye of the beholder, and worth what the market will bare. Personally, I own a 1969 Chevy C10, Short bed, and I own it because I just love the truck; I restored it and drive it around town, I enjoy it. Do I plan to sell it and make money? No…not part of the plan.
I’ve got a ‘70 short bed that I’ve had for 23 years. It was my daily driver for the first 14 years I had it, and it hard a 250/3OTT combo. Then I put a big block into it with a TH400. Haven’t driven it much since then, took it off the road to fix up.
I vividly remember these cars. There was a Plymouth dealer in Smithtown, NY. That’s Long Island, NY. Pretty populated area. He was stuck with three of them for years. A yellow one and two reds. Nobody wanted them. He didn’t get rid of the last one until 1973. It was a monstrosity then and now.
I hate to admit it, but I’m actually pleased to see the horrendous $1.2M loss on this equally horrendous “car”. It’s like watching a rich old man dump his long-suffering wife for a 20-year-old floozy……and then seeing the floozy take him for a fortune shortly thereafter. Poetic justice??
“…flying way too high in 2022, and then coming back down to earth in 2025..”
I’m learning to fly but I aint got wings
Coming down is the hardest thing
Agreed. Auctions are doing our hobby a disservice by jacking up value expectations. Everyone thinks their semi-nice old car is worth a bizzillion dollars.
Welcome back to reality.
These prices have also driven every body shop owner believing that he is Chip Foose or Kindig so if you don’t pay it at the auction you’ll pay even more trying to build it!
“Bird, it seems, is not the word.” Best opening sentence in an article today!
A 1976 Corvette stingray currently languages in a pole barn after my purchase when it was ONE year old. An eye catcher in the hugger orange over leather “rawhide” interior, more people apt to see it and ask “what is it”?, than actually show any interest in ownership of this beauty!
Attrition, in all the segments / pieces of its market, have died or are dying! Luckily, I bought it to enjoy and drive 43 years ago, and not as an investment.
But at this stage of my life, YES!!! it would sure fit/be nice to cash out-
There’s a very good chance the ‘production’ numbers cited in this,article are actually number of cars sold in the US and do not include users sold in Canada
For the family who sold this Bird at a 1.2 million dollar loss,” TAX DEDUCTION”