SOLD on May 26, 2026
Elite Dealer

1988 Ford Mustang GT

Michigan

$32,495

1988 Ford Mustang GT

Vehicle Details

Make

Ford

Model

Mustang GT

Year

1988

Exterior Color

Other

Interior Color

Gray

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

5.0L V8 iconic Foxbody power

Condition

Excellent

Description

1988 Mustang GT Foxbody— Factory Sunroof • Always Garaged • Excellent Condition This clean and well-preserved '88 Mustang GT is a standout Foxbody with a desirable factory sunroof and original gray interior. The car has been garage-kept, meticulously maintained, and needs absolutely nothing to be enjoyed immediately. Key Highlights Factory Sunroof — rare option, fully functional Gray Interior — great condition with the classic GT layout Always Garaged — paint, trim, and plastics have been beautifully preserved Strong Running 5.0L V8 — iconic Foxbody power with smooth shifting Stock Appearance — retains the original GT look without questionable mods Documentation Included Marti Report — confirms factory options and authenticity Carfax Report — clean history Well-documented ownership showing careful care over the years Overall Condition This GT presents extremely well, both inside and out.

The body is straight, the interior shows minimal wear for its age, and everything works as it should. The car drives tight, pulls strong, and is a great example of a properly cared-for Foxbody. A rare opportunity to own an unmolested Mustang GT in a great color combination, with the documentation to back it up.

Perfect for collectors, weekend cruisers, or anyone who wants one of the best-preserved '88 GTs on the market.

Ford Mustang GT Buyer's Guide (Fox Body, 1982–1993)

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1982–1993
~4 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Fox Body Mustang GT is the blue-collar muscle car of the 1980s — light, simple, and with the 5.0 HO under the hood, genuinely fast for its era. Values have moved sharply as the generation that grew up with these cars starts buying them back. A rust-free, unmolested GT is harder to find every year.
This guide covers
10-point inspection checklist
Common issues & what to avoid
In-person inspection guide
Market pricing by year & condition
4 FAQs answered
History & fun facts

Ford Mustang Market Overview

Based on 500 Ford Mustang listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

500
Listed Now
$38,003
Avg. Asking Price
1964–2001
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site — Average Range
This car: $32,495
Low: $3,000 High: $284,995
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 52% ◄
Manual 34%
Condition Distribution
Excellent 10% ◄
Good 9%
Fair 3%
Poor 0%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 500 listings →

Ford Mustang GT Buyer's Guide (Fox Body, 1982–1993)

I spent a lot of time around these cars in the early 1990s — there were Mustang GTs in every other driveway in my neighborhood. Back then nobody thought about preserving them. They got modified, crashed, raced, and discarded. That's exactly why a clean, original Fox Body GT is harder to find than people expect. The ones that survived are mostly either basket cases or survivors that somebody took care of. The basket cases are everywhere and cheap. The survivors are what you want, and they aren't cheap anymore.

What to Check Before Buying

Cowl rust probe — Probe ledge under windshield — the primary structural rust zone on Fox Mustangs
Shock tower inspection — Look down at upper strut mounts from engine bay front — rust here is structural
Floor pans at firewall — Check seam where floor meets firewall under front seat carpet
Lower rear quarters — Inspect behind rear wheel openings for rust
Convertible rocker rails — On convertible: probe rocker area under body for frame rail rust
T-5 transmission shift — Test 2nd and 3rd gear synchros — grinding = worn synchro rings
Modification inventory — Document all non-stock parts — assess quality and reversibility
Cooling system condition — Check coolant color and hose condition — overheating damages head gaskets
VIN engine code — Confirm position 8 of VIN is "M" for 5.0 HO V8
Stock originality check — Note air intake, exhaust, and suspension — all-stock examples command premium

Common Issues

Cowl rust is the primary structural failure mode — water pools under the windshield and rots the structural ledge from inside. Shock tower rust compromises the strut mounting point — a safety issue. T-5 transmission synchronizer failure on 2nd and 3rd is extremely common on any car that has been driven hard. Floor pan rust at the firewall seam. Convertible rocker rust from frame flex and water intrusion. The 5.0 HO head gaskets are reliable but fail when the cooling system is neglected or the engine is heavily modified without upgraded cooling. Nearly every Fox GT has been modified to some degree — hidden modifications that affect reliability are common.

What to Look For

Cowl ledge under windshield — probe for rust before evaluating anything else. Shock towers in engine bay — stand at front and look down at upper strut mounts for bubbled paint or rust. Floor pans under front seats at firewall seam. Lower rear quarters behind wheels. Convertible frame rails under rockers. Verify 5-speed T-5 shift quality — worn synchros on 2nd and 3rd are common on high-mileage or modified cars. Inspect for modification history: air intake, exhaust, suspension changes. On SEFI cars (1987+): scan for check engine codes if OBD port is accessible. Look for signs of overheating (headgasket): white residue at coolant overflow, oil cap underside condition.

Price Guide

Driver-quality 1987–1993 GT hatchback: $14,000–$22,000. Show quality unmodified: $25,000–$38,000. Low-mileage 1993 GT: $38,000–$48,000+. Convertibles add 25–35% premium. Carbureted 1982–1986 GT: $10,000–$18,000 driver; $20,000–$30,000 show. LX 5.0 trades 15–25% below GT prices. Heavily modified cars price unpredictably — build quality determines whether modifications add or subtract value.

Did You Know?

The Fox Body Mustang GT was Car and Driver's 1983 10Best selection. By 1992, the 5.0 Mustang had spawned an aftermarket industry worth an estimated $300 million annually. The Fox platform was also used for the Ford Thunderbird, Lincoln Continental, and Mercury Capri — the Mustang was the performance pin on a very broad platform map. The 5.0 HO engine code appears in the VIN as position eight, the letter "M."

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