As an owner of a classic car with low miles…
I have the green 1975 Dino 308 GT4 that won "Best of Show" at the 2022 Classic Motorsports Magazine Monterey Kickoff, if you frequent this site or get their emails, then you've seen the car. I bought the car at the tail end of 2021 with only 27,022 actual miles on the odometer. Was mileage a factor in my search? No. I would have bought this car if it had double or triple the mileage. In fact, I usually don't bother looking at cars with excessively low miles. For me, that's a big turn-off. I was far more concerned with the overall condition of the car than a particular number on the odometer.
The article about my car in Classic Motorsports Magazine is titled "Accidental Showstopper" and it is just that. When I set out to buy my Dino after 30+ years of dreaming about it, I had no intention of buying a concours level car. I was looking for a good driver quality car. As fate would have it, that wasn't what I found. I ended up with a car that far exceeded my expectations, it was so much better than anything I could have imagined.
The car had sat for 25 years. This was the result what happens when someone buys an expensive car and has a mechanical failure and doesn't want to deal with it, or can't afford to get it fixed. Fortunately, it was in a garage that whole time in a dry climate in the LA area, and due to this the car had no rust. Had it been stored in a different environment, especially one with any moisture, it would have been a rust-bucket and not worth much at any price. The previous owner before me bought the car out of storage and did all the heavy lifting; essentially rebuilding the engine, suspension, refurbishing the interior… etc. Basically replacing everything rubber and rebuilding everything mechanical.
That is not something I would have undertaken, and the records that came with the car show exactly why… there was a lot of money spent getting this car roadworthy after 25 years of sitting, an amount almsot equal to what I paid for the car in excellent condition.
Today the car has 34,367 miles on it. So I added 7,345 miles to it in about two and a half years (which is almost double the amount of miles the previous three owners added combined). And for almost one year of my ownership it was getting restored back to its original color! I don't believe a car should sit idle and never be driven. What's the point in owning a great car if you're never going to drive it?
I don't care how many miles I put on the odometer. I'd rather perform maintenance on my car because something wore out or broke due to use, as opposed to parts deteriorating due to time.
Most buyers will pay a premium for a low mileage car, but then if you drive you'll be devaluing the car by putting miles on it… the very reason you overpaid for the car in the first place. I would suspect those type of cars just keep trading hands in the collector circles… which is a sad life for a car.
I'm really looking forward to the day my odometer flips over.