Dealers saw “ZR1” and immediately heard “free money”
The ZR1 should’ve been the car for people like us — the guys actually driving C8s, tracking them, modding them, making content with them. But the second Chevy said “ZR1,” franchise stores did what franchise stores always do: they slapped six-figure “because we can” money on it. I’ve already seen dealer asks market adjustments in the $320K–$340K range for cars that window sticker at a little over $220K. That’s a clean $100K–$120K of pure dealership greed. And this isn’t a one-off “rich guy dealer in Florida” thing — it’s trending.
And before anybody says “well, the market decides,” no — the gatekeeper decides when the only way to get the car is through the gatekeeper.
Auctions are drunk too
Go look at the early ZR1s popping up on auction — you got cars being bid into the $330,000–$360,000 zone and still not selling. That means somebody thought it was reasonable to pay $120K–$150K over … and the seller said, “nah, I want more.” Here’s one of the public examples so you don’t think I’m making this up:
- Bring a Trailer – C8 Corvette ZR1 bid into the $330Ks, failed to meet reserve
https://bringatrailer.com/
That’s your proof that the market isn’t “naturally” at $340K — it’s being held there.
GM actually knows this is a problem
GM isn’t dumb. They watched what happened with C8 Stingray, they watched the circus with Z06, and now they’re trying to make ZR1 owners sit on the car for a year or risk having GM smack the warranty and future allocations. That’s in black and white:
- GM Authority – “GM Sets 2025 Corvette ZR1 Ownership Requirements”
https://gmauthority.com/blog/2025/03/gm-sets-2025-corvette-zr1-ownership-requirements/ GM Authority
So Chevy is literally telling people, “yeah, we see you flipping these — stop.” That’s how bad the greed is: GM had to parent its own customers because dealers and flippers won’t chill.
Meanwhile, there’s already a stop-sale / recall cloud over ZR1
This is the part that really makes the dealer markups look nasty. There’s an active fuel-spill / fire-risk recall that stops Z06 and ZR1 from moving off the lot until Chevy finishes the shield fix. So you’re telling me a car that can’t even leave the showroom without a recall fix is somehow worth $100K+ over sticker?
- Road & Track – “Chevrolet Recalling C8 Corvette Z06 and ZR1 Over Fuel-Spillage Fire Risk”
https://www.roadandtrack.com/news/a65871644/chevrolet-c8-corvette-z06-and-zr1-recall-fuel-spill-fire-risk/ Road & Track
That should lower the leverage. Dealers used it to raise the leverage.
This is worse than the Demon 170 / Last Call era
Yeah, Dodge boys were wild with the Demon 170 ADMs — I lived through it, I made videos on it. But there was a big difference:
- Dodge actually built a street freak — you could point at 1,025 hp and say “ok, I get it.” And some customers got their cars at MSRP or a respectful markup.
- Dodge actually ended the platform — so scarcity was real. With Chevy, you don’t know when or how many they will make until the C9 Corvette
- Most Demons sat in collections — everyone understood it was a trophy VIN. The ZR1 will probably be worse with lower production numbers sitting until someone drops half a million dollars on each car.
With the ZR1, Chevy made a useable supercar. Mid-engine, aero, real track car, that should be driven. And dealers looked at that and said, “cool, let’s make sure nobody drives it and get hundreds in thousands of profit.”
Why it feels extra grimy
Because it’s already a $200,000-plus Chevy. I can justify stretching for a $215K–$225K ZR1 because it’s the top dog. I cannot justify paying $340K for a car that still has:
- a recall/stop-sale cloud over it,
- a one-year anti-flip leash from GM, and
- resale risk if Chevy builds more of them than people think.
At that point you’re in used 911 Turbo S territory, McLaren GT territory, Ferrari that already took its depreciation territory. You’re not fighting other Corvettes anymore — you’re fighting actual supercars.
How to fix it (Chevy won’t though)
If Chevy really wanted to kill the ADMs on this thing, there are only two plays:
- Build more ZR1s than the dealers expect. Flood the zone.
- Lengthen the no-flip window to match the warranty and only allow sell-backs to Chevy or authorized performance stores.
- Move to an allocation-by-application model like Ford GT. You drive it, you keep it, or you don’t get another.
That’s it. Everything else is a strongly worded letter that does nothing in the end. Right now, the policy GM has is just strong enough to punish a normal buyer, not strong enough to scare a big dealer group. The same dudes holding 2019 ZR1s for crazy money are doing the same thing again — because Chevy let them keep doing it the first time.
The part nobody says out loud
The dealers are doing this because EVs didn’t print like they thought. You can’t put $50K ADM on a Blazer EV that people are scared of FOMO (Fear Of Missing Out). You can put $120K ADM on the one car every YouTuber, every collector, every doctor in Scottsdale, and every Chevy-fan dad wants to flex. And they know with limited production numbers, people will have to pay the insane asking price or they’ll never get the car.
And as long as Chevy keeps ZR1 volume low, this won’t get better. We’re going to see $300K-plus ZR1s for years — just like we still see $200K-plus C7 ZR1s hanging around unsold because some dealer or flipper would rather polish it than sell it.











