While production of the Demon 170 was limited, they aren’t fetching the premiums they once were
April 25, 2025 at 14:31

- Five Dodge Demon 170s are being listed for significantly higher than their MSRPs.
- Four of the flagship Challengers have Arizona titles, while one has an Ohio title.
- The seller is asking $185,000 for one, even though it has an MSRP of $134,631.
People were willing to spend staggering sums a couple of years ago to get the keys to a then-new Dodge Challenger SRT Demon 170. Given that it’s one of the quickest-accelerating cars on earth and limited to 3,300 units, it’s no surprise there was once feverish demand for it. However, recent auction results have indicated that interest in the Demon 170 is dying down. This hasn’t stopped one man from trying to sell five Demon 170s, each priced from well over the original MSRP.
All five cars reportedly have just delivery miles on them, and four of the five have been photographed together, parked up in the seller’s garage. These four are titled in the seller’s name and have Arizona titles, while a second purple Demon 170 he is looking to offload is titled in the name of the selling dealer’s owner and has an Ohio title.
Read: Sellers Refuse $120K For Dodge Demon 170s, Pretend It’s Still 2023
Curiously, the green Challenger Demon is currently in Rehoboth, Massachusetts, the red, grey, and one of the purple ones are in Tucson, Arizona, while the second purple one is currently in Greenville, Pennsylvania.
As the cars have been specced differently, they have different asking prices. The Sublime (Green) one had an MSRP of $146,926 and is available for $180,000. One of the Plum Crazy (purple) cars had an MSRP of $134,631 and has been listed for $185,000, while the other Plum Crazy Demon 170 has an asking price of $165,000 and a $131,431 MSRP.

The seller is also hoping to get $160,000 for the Granite (grey) model on a $122,141 MSRP, while the TorRed example is up for grabs for $160,000. It had an MSRP of $120,951.
Curiously, the seller has only listed the cars up for sale on Facebook, likely hoping to avoid any of the fees they’d be hit with if selling the cars on an online auction site. An interested buyer with over half a million dollars to spend can even opt to buy all five as part of a special package deal.