We buy nationwide and sell nationally & internationally
Our team at Beverly Hills Car Club buys classic Wagoneers outright. No consignment window, no reserve anxiety, no parade of tire-kickers through your driveway. You send photos and information; we respond with a real assessment. If an offer is made and agreed to, payment is immediate and we handle the logistics — transport, paperwork, title questions, out-of-state complications.
When Brooks Stevens penned the Wagoneer for Kaiser Jeep in the early 1960s, nobody had a name for what he’d created. The term “sport utility vehicle” didn’t exist. What arrived in showrooms in November 1962 was simply a four-wheel-drive station wagon with an automatic transmission, an overhead-cam six, and interior appointments closer to a family sedan than a farm truck. The rest of the industry needed two decades to catch up. By the time it did, the Wagoneer had evolved into the Grand Wagoneer — leather, woodgrain, power everything — and had become the quiet status symbol of ski towns, horse country, and coastal New England.
Twenty-eight years on a single platform. Three corporate parents — Kaiser, AMC, Chrysler. And today, one of the strongest collector markets in the American truck and SUV world. If you own one of these vehicles, in any condition, you already know the attention they draw. What you may still be working out is how to sell it well.
The Wagoneer story spans enough variants that where your vehicle falls in the timeline meaningfully shapes its market.
Early Kaiser-era Wagoneers (1963-1970): The first vehicles carried the Tornado 230 — an overhead-cam inline-six that was genuinely advanced for an American truck in 1963, if not always beloved by the mechanics who serviced it. V8 power arrived in 1965 with the 327 Vigilante, and Buick’s 350 “Dauntless” V8 took over in 1968. Early cars are rare survivors; most worked hard and rusted young. Honest, complete examples from this era attract serious interest precisely because so few remain.
The Super Wagoneer (1966-1969): Arguably the first true luxury SUV, full stop. Bucket seats, center console, padded vinyl roof, gold accent trim, and a four-barrel 327 — a genuinely audacious vehicle for its moment. Production was tiny and survivors are scarce, which puts documented Super Wagoneers in a category of their own. If you have one, even rough, you have something the collector market actively hunts.
AMC-era refinement (1971-1983): AMC power arrived with the 360 and 401 V8s, and 1973 brought Quadra-Trac, the full-time four-wheel-drive system that made the Wagoneer effortless in a way no competitor matched. The 1978 Wagoneer Limited — leather, air conditioning, woodgrain as standard — set the template for everything that followed. The 401-equipped trucks have a particular following among buyers who want the torque.
Grand Wagoneer (1984-1991): When the downsized XJ took over the Wagoneer name in 1984, the full-size SJ was rechristened Grand Wagoneer and settled into its role as a rolling anachronism — carbureted AMC 360, TorqueFlite 727, solid axles, and an equipment list that eventually made everything standard. Chrysler kept it alive through 1991, closing production with the Final Edition, roughly 1,500 examples with commemorative badging. Final Editions and low-mileage late trucks sit at the top of the market; the strength of Grand Wagoneer values over the past decade has pulled the whole SJ family upward with it.
We Buy All Wagoneer and Grand Wagoneer models from 1963 to 1991
What Selling Actually Nets You: Three Paths Compared
Auction: Wagoneers — especially clean Grand Wagoneers — perform well at auction, and under the right circumstances a seller can do very well. But compare realized outcomes, not headline results. The seller’s premium runs approximately 10%, transport and consignment costs come out of your side, and the timeline typically stretches two to four months. If bidding stalls under reserve, you’ve spent time and money to keep your truck.
Private sale: You control the price and the process, and some sellers genuinely enjoy it. Budget for the reality: weeks or months of inquiries, a meaningful percentage of no-shows, buyers who want the truck contingent on financing or inspection, and offers that open well below your ask. The right private buyer exists; finding them is close to a part-time job.
Direct sale to us: A specific number — not a range, not contingent, not subject to seeing the truck in person first. If an offer is made and agreed to, payment is immediate and the transaction typically wraps in days.
Selling your Wagoneer or Grand Wagoneer 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.
If you’re considering selling, here’s what helps us respond well: clear photos in decent light — exterior all around, interior, engine bay, the rocker and quarter panel areas, the tailgate, and any rust or damage. The VIN. And whatever context you can share: how long you’ve owned it, where it’s lived, what’s been done to it, and what you know needs doing.
We respond within 24-48 hours, often sooner. If an offer is made and agreed to, payment is immediate and we coordinate pickup around what works for you. When you’re ready to move forward, we’re easy to reach — and if you’re just gathering information for now, that’s fine too. No pressure either way.
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!

“I had a very good experience selling my classic BMW to Alex. I spoke and emailed with Alex personally and the transaction was smooth and easy.”

“Alex has a well structured organization to follow-up on the title, sale, payment and transport of my vehicle. Truly impressive and efficient.”

“From the moment Valarie reached out to me she was extremely professional. She really took the time to hear how much my classical car meant to me and all the work I had put into it. This made my experience one where I felt I got what my car was worth.”

“I had spoken to Alex Manos years ago regarding my 66 220SE Convertible, originally sold to a Hollywood celebrity, but at that time decided not to part with it. Now, after 45 years of ownership, Beverly Hills Car Club was the first company I called. Abraham Costallanos and the staff were easy to deal with, courteous, competent and thorough.. from arranging for documents signatures and prompt payment to scheduling pick-up. They made parting with my baby easy and pleasurable. I would highly recommend them to anyone with a truly collectible automobile to sell.”

“All excelent- six stars service!”

“Purchase of my 2002 Aston Martin DB7 went smoothly. The transfer of funds was quick and his staff made the transaction concise and timely. The vehicle was picked up in a matter of days with notifications of the time and date the driver would arrive.”

“I was extremely impressed by Alex’s knowledge and how thorough he was with his explanation of the process. He and his team were extremely polite and helpful from the initial phone call to the pickup of my Alfa. I will not think twice about contacting him again when I sell a classic vehicle.”
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!