The high-mileage 996-era 911 is never too far from discussion on PH - it’s simply too interesting a Porsche to ignore. Received well at launch but unloved as a secondhand prospect, for a long time they offered an alluringly affordable way into rear-engined Porsche sports car ownership. And some proved tougher than expectations would have suggested. So we featured 996s like the 300k-mile desert runner, plus both two-wheel drive and four-wheel drive Brave Pills. The risk was undoubtedly there at little more than £10,000, but the reward didn’t need much explaining either.
Furthermore, even as the first water-cooled 911 has slowly but surely increased in value over the past decade or so, they remain the cheapest way into one. And actually, they’re now being appreciated as a great classic Porsche, with compact dimensions, fantastic handling, and a simpler mechanical makeup than later cars. Some folk even like the headlights now…
Given all that, it’s a surprise that in 2025 this is the cheapest 996 we’ve ever seen. You’d have thought the days of 911s being sold for four-figure sums would be behind us, yet here’s a 2000 Carrera 4 Coupe available at £8,925 before any negotiation. It’s one you might actually want, too, with a manual gearbox, carbon interior bits, Turbo twist wheels and seats that are said to be from a GT2. When all the cheapish 911s now seem to be Tiptronic drop-tops, this looks like a bit of a find.
The mileage explains the price. A 911 that’s reached 200,000 miles would be pretty notable, but this 996 passed that milestone yonks ago. And then 300,000 as well. Then 350k. At its most recent service in April, the C4 sat at 378,560 miles, and is now for sale with 387,207 on the odometer. An astonishing number for anything on four wheels, really, let alone a bona fide sports car with a reliability rep that isn’t the best.
Naturally, it’s taken some work to get here. The ad says that the flat six was ‘comprehensively rebuilt’ with both a ceramic IMS and ceramic engine liners, the latter of which should prevent any bore scoring issues. It doesn’t say when the work was done, although with those upgraded parts it shouldn’t need doing again. There’s said to be plenty of main dealer history, plus new dampers, discs and pads this year. So this ought to still drive like a 911 should, to some extent.
Investment will be required cosmetically, though. Probably a full respray, for those that don’t want the scabby look, given the state of the arches and the bonnet. The sills definitely look like they’ve seen better days as well, although the MOT does run until April, so hopefully the rust isn’t terminal yet. It could be a cool project for those with the skills (or the budget) to properly rejuvenate. On the other hand, left as it is, what a winter hack opportunity the 400,000-mile 911 Carrera 4 looks…
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