no way is ANY mk1 MR2 worth over

£10k, regardless of condition

the reason being that everything depreciates.

it doesnt matter if a car has zero miles on the clock, if it is 20+ years old then it has depreciated in value.

the cars cost something like

£13-15k brand new iirc, so this car is worth, in theory,

£3-5k in the current financial climate

however, the only way a car gains value is if there is a buying market that dictates the price to be higher.

if something is in high demand and short supply then the price will rise.

i dont see a queue of people lining up to pay

£10k for a car that is over 20 years old, there is barely even a queue to pay

£1500 for a half decent one.

so the buyer is either going to hold out for a single person to come along and pay a stupid amount of money for a car that is worth less than half its asking price, or the price is going to drop gradually until someone bites.

i reckon the most anyone will pay is probably

£7-8k, it is worth

£5k tops

for some reason a few people

(mostly on the owners clubs) seem to regard the MR2 as some kind of cult classic and rare sports car.

in reality it is a run of the mill budget sports car

(no better than an MX5, S2000, Lotus Elise

(id rate a Lotus Elise as better in fact)) that has gained its current popularity and following mainly due to the fact you can pick up a good one for

£1500-2500!! if Lotus Elises were that cheap, then most people here wouldnt be driving an MR2 i would predict.

if a cars popularity is based on how cheap it is, then to start thinking that a mint one should be worth almost as much now as it was new totally defies the origins of the cars popularity.

if they cost big money then 99% of MR2 owners wouldnt be interested anymore!

thus i go back to my original point

- a good MR2 is worth

£1500-2500, an absolutely mint MR2 is therefore worth about

£5k, because it has no heritage or historical importance, or even any kind of sports car pedigree.

it was a budget everyday driver when it came out, and still remains that.

if you push the price north of

£5k then you could just as easily buy an MX5 or an S2000 or an S1 Elise.

and if that becomes the case, then the MR2's

"classic" status and following will disappear overnight

having said all that i wouldnt be surprised if someone will be stupid enough to pay the asking price.

but i reckon youd easily knock the seller down to

£7k if you showed up with pound notes