Elite Dealer

1967 Pontiac Bonneville

Michigan

$32,495

1967 Pontiac Bonneville

Vehicle Details

Make

Pontiac

Model

Bonneville

Year

1967

Mileage

90,000 miles

Body Type

Convertible

Exterior Color

Red

Interior Color

White

Transmission

Automatic

Drivetrain

RWD

Fuel Type

Gasoline

Engine

V8

Condition

Good

Description

This stunning 1967 Pontiac Bonneville convertible is a Florida car that's ready to turn heads at any gathering. Fresh red paint and a crisp white power top create an irresistible combination, while the white upholstery remains in very good condition. Recently serviced with a new battery and tires, it's equipped with a V8 automatic and shows over 90,000 miles.

The car runs and drives well with nice period details like body side skirts intact. While not a frame-off restoration, this is a genuine, presentable classic that captures the golden-era appeal of sixties Pontiac muscle. An excellent candidate for shows and weekend cruising.

Pontiac Bonneville Buyer's Guide

Full guide
M
Mike Sullivan
Muscle Cars
1957–1970
~3 min read
Updated Apr 2026
The Pontiac Bonneville started as the fastest American production car of 1957 and evolved into the Wide-Track performance flagship that defined Pontiac's golden era β€” a full-size car that combined genuine V8 performance with the luxury appointments that buyers at this price point expected.
This guide covers
βœ“ 8-point inspection checklist
βœ“ Common issues & what to avoid
βœ“ In-person inspection guide
βœ“ Market pricing by year & condition
βœ“ 4 FAQs answered
βœ“ History & fun facts

Pontiac Bonneville Market Overview

Based on 13 Pontiac Bonneville listings currently on ClassicCarsArena.com

13
Listed Now
$19,489
Avg. Asking Price
1960–1970
Year Range
Price Position on Our Site β€” Above Average
This car: $32,495
Low: $4,995 High: $43,495
Transmission Distribution
Automatic 69% ◄
Condition Distribution
Excellent 8%
Good 15% ◄
Fair 15%
Data from ClassicCarsArena.com listings Browse all 13 listings →
πŸ’°

What is this car worth?

Check sold prices for the 1967 Pontiac Bonneville

Valuation Tool β†’

Pontiac Bonneville Buyer's Guide

Mike Sullivan here. In 1957, Pontiac produced exactly 630 Bonnevilles β€” a fuel-injected convertible that was, at $5,100, the most expensive American car outside of Cadillac and Lincoln, and the fastest American production car of the year. That's where the Bonneville name started: as a performance statement, not a luxury statement. The name honored Bonneville Salt Flats, where Pontiac racing cars had set records, and the car's specifications backed the association.

From that 630-unit performance car origin, the Bonneville grew into Pontiac's flagship for the Wide-Track era β€” the car that sat above the GTO in the lineup, that carried the biggest engines, that had the most lavish interiors. The 1965–1970 Bonneville with the 428ci or 455ci is a serious performance luxury car that deserves more collector attention than it currently gets.

What to Check Before Buying

Lower Rear Quarter Rust β€” Probe lower rear quarters thoroughly β€” the most common structural failure on all Bonnevilles.
Rear Floor Pan β€” Inspect trunk and rear floor from underneath and inside.
Tri-Power Verification β€” On Tri-Power cars, verify all three carbs are original Rochester 2-barrels and properly synchronized.
Engine Compression β€” Compression test on 428ci or 455ci β€” confirms ring condition and rules out head issues.
Transmission Function β€” Test TH400 or TH350 through all ranges β€” smooth shifts with no slipping.
1957 FI System β€” On 1957 cars, have the Rochester fuel injection system verified by a specialist β€” completeness and function are critical to value.
Convertible Top (if applicable) β€” Test top mechanism and hydraulics β€” inspect frame for rust and the rear tub for water damage.
Power Accessories β€” Test all power windows and seat β€” circuit failures are common age-related issues.

Common Issues

Lower rear quarter panel rust β€” universal on northern cars. Rear floor pan rust. Tri-Power carburetor synchronization issues β€” all three carbs must be properly tuned. 428ci and 455ci oil consumption from worn valve stem seals on unrestored high-mileage examples. TH400 band adjustment on high-mileage cars. Power window circuit failures. 1957 Rochester fuel injection system β€” correct function and completeness are increasingly rare. Convertible top hydraulic seal failures and mechanism rust.

What to Look For

Lower rear quarter panels are the primary rust location on any Bonneville β€” probe thoroughly, especially on salt-belt cars. The rear floor pan is the secondary concern. On Tri-Power cars, verify all three Rochester 2-barrel carburetors are original β€” a transplanted single-carb setup or incorrect carbs reduce value significantly. Verify the 428ci or 455ci engine doesn't have excessive oil consumption; a compression test reveals the engine's real condition. The TH400 or TH350 automatic transmission should shift cleanly through all ranges. On 1957 fuel-injected cars, the Rochester FI system must be verified by a specialist β€” complete, functioning original FI on a 1957 Bonneville is a significant value element.

Price Guide

1957 Bonneville convertible (original FI, documented): $80,000–$160,000+. 1959–1964 Bonneville (driver): $12,000–$28,000. 1961–1966 Tri-Power Bonneville: $18,000–$40,000. 1965–1969 Bonneville 428ci (convertible): $28,000–$60,000. 1965–1969 Bonneville 428ci (hardtop): $14,000–$32,000. 1970 Bonneville 455ci: $12,000–$26,000. Convertibles premium 40–60% over equivalent hardtops in all years.

Did You Know?

The 1957 Pontiac Bonneville was named for the Bonneville Salt Flats in Utah, where Pontiac-sponsored racing cars had set records in the 1950s. It was the only full-size American car with standard factory fuel injection that year, and at about $5,782 it was priced above the Cadillac DeVille convertible. Pontiac's "Wide-Track" slogan coined in 1959 described an actual engineering change: the track was widened by approximately 5 inches, lowering the center of gravity and improving handling, and became one of the most effective automotive marketing campaigns of the era.

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