Beverly Hills Car Club Classic Cars Dealership – we buy nationwide and sell nationally & internationally
Type this question into a search bar and you’ll get a wall of contradictions: price guides that lag the market by a year, auction results missing the context that explains them, and forum threads where everyone’s car is worth more than everyone else’s. The honest answer is that a fourth-generation Monte Carlo SS is worth a range so wide it’s almost unhelpful — a rough T-top project and a documented 1986 Aerocoupe are both “a Monte Carlo SS,” and they occupy different financial universes.
So instead of quoting numbers that would be stale before you finished reading, this guide does something more useful: it walks through the actual machinery of Monte Carlo SS valuation — the specific factors that move a car up or down the range — so you can locate your own car honestly. And when you want the range collapsed into one real number, our team at Beverly Hills Car Club will give you exactly that: a specific offer on your specific car, usually within 24-48 hours.
A word on who’s telling you this. Alex Manos founded Beverly Hills Car Club in Los Angeles in 2004, and the team now buys classics across the 48 continental states and Hawaii — thousands of makes, models, and conditions over two decades, including estates, divorces, storage liens, and titles with complications attached.
Monte Carlo 4th Gen | Aerocoupe | SS | 1987 model year | Valuations
Before condition enters the conversation, identity sets the baseline. The 1983-1988 SS range breaks into tiers the market treats very differently.
The 1986 Aerocoupe sits at the top. Roughly 200 fastback cars built solely to homologate the body for NASCAR — verified examples anchor the peak of 4th gen values and trade in a different conversation than the rest of the range.
The 1987 Aerocoupe is the attainable rarity. Just over 6,000 built in the body style’s single volume year. A meaningful premium over the equivalent notchback, with documentation doing heavy lifting since Chevrolet gave the Aerocoupe no unique VIN designation.
Notchback SS cars, 1983-1988, form the body of the market — with 1987, the peak production year, supplying the most cars and the most comparables. Early 1983-84 cars in their limited original colors have a purist following; 1988 carries final-year appeal. Within the notchback pool, year matters less than everything that follows below.
Clones and tributes sit apart. The SS conversion is cosmetically easy, so the market checks credentials: a “Z” in the fifth VIN position for the Z65 SS package, a “G” in the eighth for the L69 305 High Output V8, and a Service Parts Identification sticker that agrees. A well-done tribute is a sellable car — it’s just priced as what it is, not what it resembles.
Published values are averages of past transactions — cars that already sold, in conditions you can’t inspect, with stories you don’t know. Your car is a specific object: a particular VIN, a particular rust history, a particular file of paperwork, sitting in a particular place. The spread between “average retail” and what your car brings can be substantial in either direction, and that spread is exactly where sellers get hurt — either by pricing off a guide number their car can’t support, or by accepting a casual offer that ignores what elevates it.
This is also why the emotional dimension deserves saying out loud. A large share of these cars have been in one family since new — bought by someone because of what Dale Earnhardt was doing on Sunday afternoons, kept because of what it came to mean. If you’re selling a parent’s car, or closing a chapter, the question “how much is it worth?” carries more than money. We buy with that in mind. Alex built this business as an enthusiast, and the team treats these cars — and the people selling them — accordingly.
Selling your ’87 Monte Carlo (whether SS, Aerocoupe or other model) to Beverly Hills Car Club involves a straightforward process designed for convenience and security:
The entire process typically concludes within days rather than the months often required for auction or private sales, allowing you to quickly realize the value of your investment while minimizing market exposure risk.
Here’s what turns this guide into your number: clear photos in decent light — full exterior, interior with a look under the carpet edges if possible, engine bay showing the air cleaner and valve covers, trunk floor, the SPID sticker, T-top panels and seals if equipped, and honest shots of any trouble spots. Include the VIN, and add whatever context you have: ownership history, storage conditions, work done, known needs, and any documentation from window sticker to service file.
We respond within 24-48 hours, often sooner — either with a specific offer and the reasoning behind it, or a direct explanation of why the car isn’t right for us and where it might do better. No pressure, no follow-up campaigns. The question “how much is my Monte Carlo SS worth?” has a real answer. When you’re ready, we’ll give it to you.
Happy motoring! Whether you are selling a showroom-quality car, or a total restoration project, the Beverly Hills Car Club is always looking to add to their wide-ranging inventory. For cars that are barn-find restoration projects, all the way up to top-of-the-line concours cars!

“The sale of my 1953 MG TD was a very pleasant experience. I got a fair price for the car and received a cashier’s check and paperwork the very next day. Professional car transporters showed up several days later to pick up the car. They were very courteous, on time, and bent over backwards to accommodate my schedule. Overall the transaction was very pleasant and an outstanding experience! I highly recommend to anyone looking to sell.”

“Our dealings with Alex Manos and company was a very positive experience. Everyone was very helpful and pleasant. We would recommend anyone who would be interested in selling a vehicle to call them.”

“I bought and sold used industrial manufacturing equipment during my career and am the fourth generation of a now five generation family business. I provide that as I am very experienced in the buying and selling process. Selling my 69 Jaguar was THE SMOOTHEST EXPERIENCE I have ever had. I have passed on their process to my son with the hopes it helps him make the process easier for his clients.”

“Alex and his staff were excellent about reaching out to let me know what to expect and keeping me informed along the way. They made the process quick and efficient.”

“Very responsive and transparent.”

“Very helpful walked me through the buying process.”

“It was nice to deal with such a pleasant group of people.”
Or email via our website and we’ll go over all you need to know to sell your classic!
Just send a few photos, this is often all we need to make an offer.
You get you paid, and then we’ll pick up the vehicle – IT’S THAT SIMPLE!