Static compare
Auction-backed
SEO landing page

2014-2017 Ford Mustang (2014 - 2017) vs 2019-present Ford Mustang 2019 Mustang Shelby GT500 - Market Data Comparison

Side-by-side market data for two published collector-car generations, pre-rendered from Turbopedia's auction context views and paired with deterministic analysis that turns the raw comparison into an indexable research page.

Quick Answer

The Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) has a median sale price of $52,900 based on 261 auction sales, while the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) trades at $85,500 from 432 sales. The Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) is $32,600 (38.1%) less expensive.

Interactive handoff

Use this page as the SEO entry point, then move into the tool.

This route is the indexable comparison page. The interactive tool stays focused on changing the pairing, exploring another generation, or re-running the head-to-head with different inputs.

Current pair

Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) vs Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500)

Combined volume: 1,091 tracked results. Last refreshed: Mar 28, 2026.

Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017))

Median price

$52,900

Sold count

261

12-month sold

52

Unsold rate

26.1%

Liquidity grade: Deep

Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500)

Median price

$85,500

Sold count

432

12-month sold

79

Unsold rate

27.1%

Liquidity grade: Deep

Comparison notes

The table below uses the same generation-level rows as the interactive compare tool, but the page wraps that output in pair-specific context for search and research intent.

Each page is limited to published generations with at least 25 sold results, which keeps the median, liquidity, and unsold-rate signals above the thin-data threshold.

The CTA below keeps this pair linked to the live compare surface at /compare?a=ford%2Fmustang%2F2014&b=ford%2Fmustang%2Fshelby-gt500-2019.

Side-by-Side Market Table

Metric

Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017))

2014-2017

Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500)

2019-present

Year Range

2014-2017
2019-present

Total Auction Results

Higher = deeper public record

441
650

Sold Count

Higher = more liquid

261
432

Unsold Count

Lower = healthier close rate

115
176

Unsold Rate

Lower = healthier market

26.1%
27.1%

Median Price

Lower = cheaper entry point

$52,900
$85,500

Price Range (P25-P75)

$35,000 - $69,000
$68,175 - $106,360

Lowest Sale

$1,000
$5,000

Highest Sale

$170,500
$198,000

12-Month Results

Higher = more recent activity

70
109

12-Month Sold

Higher = more recent sold volume

52
79

Variant Count

Higher = broader generation tree

15
3

Source Count

Higher = wider auction-house coverage

10
14

Liquidity Grade

Auction-turnover proxy based on sold depth

Deep
Deep

Price Comparison: Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) vs Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500)

At the median, the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) sits at $52,900 and the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) sits at $85,500. That makes the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) the lower-cost entry point by $32,600, or 38.1% relative to the pricier Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500). Its typical sold band sits between $35,000 and $69,000, which is usually a better guide than chasing the headline high sale. Its typical sold band sits between $68,175 and $106,360, which is usually a better guide than chasing the headline high sale.

The full observed range also matters. The lowest recorded sale on this surface is $1,000 for the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) and $5,000 for the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500), while the highest sales reach $170,500 and $198,000 respectively. The middle of the market still overlaps, with both cars sharing a realistic trading zone around $68,175 to $69,000. That matters because it tells you the decision is not only about the record-setting examples at the top of the market. In practice, that means buyers should read the median as the anchor, use the P25-P75 band as the realistic shopping lane, and treat the top-end outliers as evidence of exceptional cars rather than everyday pricing.

Market Activity: Which Sells More?

By the numbers, the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) has the deeper transaction record with 432 sold results against 261 for the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)). That larger sample usually makes the market easier to benchmark because there is more evidence behind every median and range estimate. The Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) is also the busier recent market, posting 79 sold results from 109 tracked outcomes in the last 12 months, versus 52 from 70 for the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)).

Unsold rate adds the market-health layer that raw sold counts miss. The Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) posts an unsold rate of 26.1%, while the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) is at 27.1%. Lower is generally healthier because it means a larger share of listings actually clear reserve. That signal looks even stronger when you combine it with source breadth: the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) currently draws from Barrett-Jackson, Bring a Trailer, and Benzin, plus 7 other auction houses, and the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) draws from Acc Auctions, Barrett-Jackson, and Bring a Trailer, plus 11 other auction houses. In Turbopedia's liquidity grading, the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) reads as deep and the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) reads as deep, which helps explain whether a market feels deep, active, or still relatively thin.

Which Is the Better Buy?

If affordability is the main constraint, the raw numbers favor the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)). If resale flexibility matters more, the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) has the stronger liquidity case because it has the larger sold sample and a more established benchmark set. Its lower unsold rate also suggests buyers and sellers are meeting more cleanly in public auctions.

On the recent trend signal, the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) is firmer. Its median sits 16.5% above the prior 12-month median, while the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) is at -0.5% over the same comparison window. That can hint at momentum, but it is not a forecast and it should never be read as investment advice by itself. Numbers don't capture condition, provenance, or personal preference. A cheaper car can be the better value and still be the worse fit for a specific buyer, while the pricier market can justify itself if the car's story, originality, and buyer demand are materially stronger.

Compare another pair

Want to compare different cars?

This landing page stays fixed on one head-to-head query. Use the interactive comparison tool to swap in another generation, open the same pair in a tool-first view, or branch into a fresh market comparison.

Structured FAQ

Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) vs Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500) FAQ

Pair-specific market questions for the Ford Mustang ((2014 - 2017)) and the Ford Mustang (2019 Mustang Shelby GT500).