Beverly Hills Car Club Classic Cars Dealership – we buy nationwide and sell nationally & internationally
Every collectible car has a year that becomes shorthand for the whole model. For the fourth-generation Monte Carlo SS, that year is 1987 – and unusually, it earned the title through abundance rather than scarcity. This was the SS at full maturity and full volume: the peak production year of the entire run, the only year the Aerocoupe was built in real numbers, and the season Dale Earnhardt drove the Monte Carlo body to his second consecutive Winston Cup championship. When someone pictures a Monte Carlo SS, they’re almost always picturing a 1987.
That creates a specific situation for you as a seller. There are more 1987 cars in the market than any other year, which means more comparables, more competition, and a wider spread between what ordinary examples and exceptional ones actually bring. The 1987 SS market doesn’t reward showing up; it rewards knowing exactly what your car is and putting it in front of a buyer who can tell the difference.
Our team at Beverly Hills Car Club is that kind of buyer. Alex Manos founded the company in Los Angeles in 2004, and we now buy classics across the 48 continental states and Hawaii — a track record covering thousands of makes, models, and conditions, including estates, divorces, storage liens, and titles with stories attached. We buy 1987 Monte Carlo SS examples directly: if an offer is made and agreed to, payment is immediate and the logistics are ours to handle. Here’s how to think about what you own before you think about how to sell it.
Monte Carlo 4th Gen | Aerocoupe | SS | 1987 model year | Valuations
By 1987 the SS formula was fully sorted. Under the aero nose sat the L69 -the 305 High Output V8 with its higher compression, hotter camshaft, Quadrajet four-barrel under a dual-snorkel air cleaner, and genuine dual-outlet exhaust. It was the only engine offered in the SS, which simplifies authentication: the eighth position of your VIN should read “G,” and the fifth position should carry the “Z” that designates the SS body under RPO Z65.
Behind the L69, every 1987 car ran the 200-4R four-speed overdrive automatic – the transmission that gave the SS relaxed highway legs the early TH350-equipped 1983 cars never had. The 200-4R carries a mixed reputation among people who’ve only heard about it secondhand, but the SS calibration was a sturdier piece than the base version, and the same fundamental transmission lived behind considerably more powerful engines elsewhere in GM’s lineup. For value purposes, an original and healthy 200-4R supports the car’s originality case. A swap to a TH350 or a later overdrive unit doesn’t sink the car — it just moves it into a different conversation, and we have that conversation honestly rather than punitively.
The 1987 order sheet is also where equipment starts separating cars. T-tops are the big one: desirable, common on this year, and a double-edged sword we’ll get to shortly. Beyond that, the mature option mix and the broadest color palette of the SS run mean 1987 cars vary more than the model’s reputation suggests. An unusual factory color combination, verified low mileage, or a loaded original-owner car stands out in a crowded field. Your trunk-mounted Service Parts Identification sticker is the fastest way to document what your car left the factory with, and the SPID plus a build sheet or window sticker is the paperwork trifecta that moves a 1987 SS out of the commodity pool and into collector territory.
One boundary note: if your car wears the sloped fastback rear glass, you own an Aerocoupe — a distinct animal with its own market, its own authentication questions, and its own article in this series. Everything here applies to the notchback SS, which made up the overwhelming majority of 1987 production.
The 1987 SS lived its first decades as an affordable performance car, which means a large share of survivors carry period modifications: engine swaps, shift kits, wheels, exhaust, gauges. The market has sorted itself accordingly. Numbers-matching, unmodified cars with documentation sit at the top and have pulled away as G-body collecting matured. Tastefully modified drivers occupy a healthy middle market of their own. Heavily altered cars trade to a narrower audience.
None of these categories is a problem for us — they’re just different cars with different buyers waiting at the end. What matters is accuracy. If the original L69 went away years ago, say so. If the T-tops leak, say so. We price what the car actually is, and we don’t renegotiate after agreement, make lowball offers to test your resolve, or waste your time if the car isn’t a fit for our inventory. Two decades of buying has taught us that straight talk in both directions is what makes transactions clean.
We also understand that plenty of 1987 cars carry weight that has nothing to do with RPO codes. This was the year a lot of racing fans bought their Monte Carlo because of what was happening on Sunday afternoons, and many of these cars have been in one family since. If the car belonged to a parent, or represents a chapter you’re closing, that’s not incidental to us — Alex built this business as an enthusiast, and the team buys with that same respect for what these cars mean to the people selling them.
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 lets us respond quickly and accurately: clear photos in decent light — full exterior from all angles, interior including a look under the carpet edges if you can manage it, engine bay showing the air cleaner and valve covers, trunk floor and drop-offs, the SPID sticker, the T-top panels and seals if equipped, and any rust or trouble areas shown honestly. Add the VIN and whatever context you have: how long you’ve owned it, storage history, work performed, known needs, and any documentation from window sticker to service records.
We’ll come back within 24-48 hours, usually faster, with either a specific offer and the reasoning behind it or a straightforward explanation of why the car isn’t right for us. No follow-up pressure, no manufactured urgency. When you’re ready to move forward, the mechanics of selling will be as simple as they should have been all along.
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!

“Very good experience. Things promised were delivered quickly and professionally.”

“Great experience, text him some pictures and made the handshake deal over the phone. his driver came to my house with a brand new flat bed truck and picked up the Porsche, his driver was courteous and very professional.”

“Alex was wonderful to work with. I sold him my older Porsche and everything went extremely well. I would do business with Alex again.”

“My experience was amazing. A few emails and texts, a price negotiation and then the check was sent to me. A few days later a car carrier arrived to transport my car from Maine to L.A. The hardest part was seeing my car that I had for 33 years get transported away. Who would have thought that selling a car to someone across the country could be so easy I highly recommend Alex Manos. The employees I interacted with were very professional, knowledgeable and pleasant. Don’t hesitate to do business with them!”

“One of the most easy and painless transactions I have ever been through. Excellent communication. Professional, and courteous. Exactly what a business should be. I would recommend contacting Alex for any future vintage automotive sales.”

“Alpha was very timely in providing the documents needed. He reviewed everything necessary to understand this vehicle. Alpha is a definite asset to your team.”

“The whole process of selling my Austin Healey 100-4 was fair, fast & professional. All of the people that I dealt with were extremely helpful and very pleasant to communicate at every step of the way. All questions were answered in a timely fashion and if I needed any clarification it was immediate. At the end of the process I am truly satisfied that I got a good solid deal for the car and I am extremely happy to know that the car will be going to a new owner that will enjoy it as much as I did.”
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!