Beverly Hills Car Club Classic Cars Dealership – we buy nationwide and sell nationally & internationally
The Aerocoupe exists because of roughly two hundred pounds of aerodynamic drag at 200 miles per hour. By the mid-1980s, Ford’s slippery Thunderbird was embarrassing the notchback Monte Carlo on NASCAR’s superspeedways, and Chevrolet’s answer wasn’t a bigger engine — it was glass. A dramatically sloped rear window, a shortened decklid, a revised spoiler, and suddenly the Monte Carlo cut through the air well enough to fight back. NASCAR’s homologation rules demanded that street versions exist, so Chevrolet built them: a token run in 1986 to make the race car legal, and a single volume year in 1987.
Dale Earnhardt drove Aerocoupe-bodied Monte Carlos to consecutive Winston Cup championships in 1986 and 1987. That’s the provenance sitting in your garage — not a trim package, not an appearance option, but a car that exists solely because racing required it. Homologation specials occupy a privileged place in collector markets across every marque, from European exotics to American muscle, and the Aerocoupe has spent the last decade being rediscovered by a generation of collectors who watched those cars run at Daytona.
Our team at Beverly Hills Car Club buys Aerocoupes directly. Alex Manos started the business in Los Angeles in 2004, and we now buy nationwide — across the 48 continental states and Hawaii — with a track record spanning thousands of makes, models, and conditions, including estates, divorces, storage liens, and every paperwork complication in between. If an offer is made and agreed to, payment is immediate. That’s the short version. The longer version starts with making sure the world knows what your car actually is.
Monte Carlo 4th Gen | Aerocoupe | SS | 1987 model year | Valuations
The 1986 run existed purely to satisfy NASCAR’s homologation minimum. Around 200 cars, built late in the model year, sold quietly through select dealers. Survivors are scarce, documented survivors scarcer, and the market treats them accordingly — these are the cars that anchor the top of the 4th gen value structure alongside the finest low-mile notchbacks.
The 1987 cars are the attainable version of the same idea: just over 6,000 built, with the full production-line treatment and broader availability. That’s still a small number — for perspective, it’s a fraction of overall SS production in what was the model’s peak year — and 1987 Aerocoupes have appreciated as the broader G-body market matured. Within the 1987 pool, the usual hierarchy applies: original drivetrains outperform swapped cars, documented mileage outperforms broad claims, unrestored honest examples increasingly outperform older repaints, and complete factory paperwork adds a premium that surprises sellers who’ve held these documents for decades without thinking about them.
Mechanically, both years carry the same heart as every 4th gen SS: the L69 305 HO with its Quadrajet, higher compression, and hotter cam, paired with the 200-4R four-speed overdrive automatic. An original, correctly functioning 200-4R supports the car’s value; a transmission swap or a tired unit becomes a pricing factor, not a rejection. The same goes for the engine — a numbers-matching G-code L69 commands a clear premium, while a well-executed swap simply places the car with a different buyer.
An Aerocoupe is exactly the kind of car auction houses like to catalog — a story car with racing pedigree. Consignment can work well for exceptional examples, and we won’t pretend otherwise. The realistic accounting includes a seller’s premium of around 10%, transport to the venue, consignment logistics, and a timeline that typically runs two to four months from commitment to payment. If the reserve isn’t met on sale day, you’ve spent the time and the costs and you still own the car. Sellers comparing outcomes should compare net proceeds and elapsed time, not hammer prices in past results.
Private sale puts you in control and costs no commission — it costs time instead. The Aerocoupe’s rising profile means you’ll draw plenty of interest, but interest and qualified buyers are different populations. Expect tire-kickers who want to talk Earnhardt, inspection contingencies, financing that wobbles, and negotiations that restart after you thought they’d finished. Some sellers enjoy the process and meet good people through it. Others discover it’s a second job with an uncertain payday.
Selling directly to our team trades the theoretical peak for a known result. Top dollar paid and immediate transactions is how we operate: you send photos and information, we respond within 24-48 hours — often sooner — and if an offer is made and agreed to, it’s a specific number, not a range and not contingent on a later inspection.
Selling your 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.
Send us clear photos in decent light: the full exterior including the rear glass and spoiler from multiple angles, the interior, the engine bay showing the air cleaner and valve covers, the trunk area and drop-offs, the SPID sticker, and any rust or trouble spots. Include the VIN and whatever documentation and ownership context you have — window sticker, build sheet, service records, how long you’ve owned it, how it’s been stored, what you know about its needs.
We’ll respond within 24-48 hours with either a specific offer and the reasoning behind it, or a direct explanation of why the car isn’t a fit and where it might do better. No pressure, no follow-up campaigns, no urgency theater. When you’re ready to move forward, we make the mechanics of selling as clean as they should be.
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!

“Our experience with Alex and the entire team was perfect! I couldn’t have asked for better. Completely logical process! Money shows up through a wire, you send the service records (which is sent through email) along with the title and signed purchase slip which is emailed, and then a truck comes to pick up the car within the hour of said time. Easy and extremely smooth. We sold them our inherited 2010 Porsche Panamera Turbo with only 25k in miles.. it was optioned out with no accidents. Everyone had an offer for it.. we found the most fair but also reliable offer to be with Beverly Hills Classic Car. One has to be so careful these days. This is a company you can trust 100%.”

“Alex and his team were incredible to work with. The sale price was agreed upon quickly and reasonably, funds were transferred in a timely basis, and Camille and Corrine made the paperwork and transportation process a breeze. Very happy with the overall experience.”

“Jerry was very professional and experienced in his field.”

“We recently became responsible for selling a well preserved, running 1975 Silver Shadow RR 4 dr. sedan by way of the death of a very close friend who owned the car among a small collection of vintage Rolls Royce cars as his appointed successor trustee to his estate since no heirs wanted it. We had little interest in the San Franciso area among several places that sold and repaired such cars on consignment and decided to look at the Southern California market. In looking at the 3-4 primary dealerships that dealt in Rolls Royce we found on line Alex Manos Custom Classic Car business an called them directly and principally dealt with Abraham Castallenos. They initially asked for the photos and the video of the car running since it was located in Northern California at the deceased second home in Mendocino county. We had very good multiple photos of the vehicle and from then on we could not have had a better experience in selling the car for our dear friend’s estate on behalf of his heirs. The entire process , negotiations of the sale, price, the immediate payment only based on our photos and emails, even without Abraham nor Alex having seen the actual vehicle, basically all conducted on faith alone, to his outfit picking up the vehicle in Mendocino with a special two axel trailor to our trustee picking up the check at the warehouse and main office building where the classic cars are stored and on display could not have gone smoother without any hitches. The overall experience could not have been conducted better we feel other than feeling some remorse in letting the car go after becoming fond of it and having driven it in the Mendocino and doing some minor repairs on the vehicle. We felt good that Alex and Abraham would do well by it to restore it and find an eventual good and worthy home for the classic car in remarkable shape we thought for a 1975 classic Rolls Royce car.”

“Selling my classic car went smoothly and working with Alex and his team was great!!”

“Great!”

“It was an excellent process that went so much faster than we had expected. We are happy that this car that has been in our family for 52 years is in good hands.”
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!