SOLD on May 26, 2026
Elite Dealer

1984 Cadillac Seville

Michigan

$14,995 $17,495

1984 Cadillac Seville

Vehicle Details

Make

Cadillac

Model

Seville

Year

1984

Drivetrain

FWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Condition

Excellent

Description

1984 Cadillac Seville Elegante — an all-original, low-mileage luxury classic with only 55,500 miles. This top-of-the-line Elegante package includes the premium two-tone trim, upscale interior materials, and Cadillac's highest-level comfort features of the era. The car is exceptionally well preserved, riding on brand-new tires, and runs and drives beautifully with the smoothness and refinement Cadillacs of this generation are known for.

A clean, well-kept example like this makes for an excellent weekend cruiser, collector piece, or comfortable vintage daily driver. A genuine Elegante with low miles and original condition is getting harder to find — this one is a standout.

Cadillac Seville Buyer's Guide

Full guide
S
Sarah Whitfield
Pre-War Classics
1975–1985
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
Cadillac's sophisticated answer to Mercedes-Benz — the 1975–1979 Seville is a compact American luxury masterpiece that remains elegantly undervalued.
This guide covers
8-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
3 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Cadillac Seville Market Overview

Based on 14 Cadillac Seville listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

14
Listed Now
$22,689
Avg. Asking Price
1958–1988
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $14,995
Low: $6,495 High: $54,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 93%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 7% ◄
Good 7%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 14 listings →

Cadillac Seville Buyer's Guide

The Cadillac Seville represents Cadillac's most significant strategic pivot since the postwar era: a deliberate, sophisticated answer to the import luxury threat from Mercedes-Benz and BMW. Smaller, lighter, and more refined than any Cadillac before it, the Seville proved that American luxury could adapt to the 1970s energy crisis without sacrificing prestige. Today it is an affordable, elegant classic that rewards the discerning buyer who looks past badge snobbery.

What to Check Before Buying

Test EFI system through cold start, warm idle, and hot restart (1975–1979)
Inspect Nova-platform floor pans and rocker panels for rust
Test all vacuum-operated accessories (windows, locks, climate)
On HT4100 cars: look for white exhaust, overheating history, and verify head bolt condition
Verify A/C function or assess R-12 to R-134a retrofit cost
Inspect leather interior condition — correct color/grain replacement is expensive
Check for diesel engine (identify by badging and exhaust color) — verify complete rebuild if present
Confirm trunk and interior dry — no water intrusion from roof or quarter windows

Common Issues

The Bendix EFI on first-generation cars needs attention on most survivors — hot-start issues and lean surge are common. HT4100 head gaskets and head bolt thread pull-out are the defining problem of 1982–1984 cars — many have been poorly repaired. Diesel V8s require complete rebuilds if not recently done. Nova-based structure rusts in the usual floor and rocker locations.

What to Look For

The ideal Seville is a first-generation 1977–1979 car in a classic color combination — Cotillion White/Antique Saddle or Firethorn Red/Antique Parchment — with a sorted EFI system and dry, rust-free structure. These cars are still regularly found as estate vehicles with modest mileage and careful ownership. Avoid any car described as 'just needs the engine sorted' on HT4100 generations.

Price Guide

First-gen 1976–1979: $6,000–$12,000 driver; $14,000–$20,000 detailed. 1980–1981 bustle-back: $5,000–$14,000. 1982–1985 HT4100: $3,000–$8,000 (engine risk makes higher prices unjustifiable without specialist documentation). EFI rebuild budget: $800–$1,500.

Did You Know?

The Seville was the only American car with standard electronic fuel injection when it debuted in 1975. Its Nova platform underpinnings were the worst-kept secret in Detroit, yet the execution was so convincing that Road & Track compared it favorably to the Mercedes-Benz 280S. The bustle-back 1980 design was inspired by Hooper-bodied Rolls-Royces of the 1940s and 1950s — a direct reference to British coachbuilding tradition.

Similar Listings

Share only if you'd like the seller to call you directly.

By contacting this seller you accept the Visitors Agreement

Call this seller?

You're about to call Classic Car Deals about the 1984 Cadillac Seville.

+1 (231) 468-2809

Before you call: Never wire money or share bank info over the phone. Read our scam-avoidance tips.
Call Now

Send to a Friend

Share this 1984 Cadillac Seville listing.

Report this Ad

Help us keep the marketplace clean. Our moderation team reviews every report within 24 hours.