Top 10 Classic American Cars 1965 — Best Overall + Best Value
Top 10 Classic American Cars 1965 — Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
Looking back six decades, 1965 was the single most consequential model year in postwar American automotive history — it was the Ford Mustang's first full sales year, the year the Pontiac GTO turned the muscle car from a curiosity into a movement, and the design high-water mark for the Buick Riviera and the slab-sided Lincoln Continental.
Our Best Overall pick of 1965 is the Ford Mustang, which started at a 1965 MSRP of $2,372 and reinvented the affordable sporty car for an entire generation. Our Best Value pick is the Plymouth Barracuda Formula S, which started at a 1965 MSRP of $2,535 and delivered genuine fastback character and a willing 273 V8 for Mustang money.
Both cars proved that 1965 was the year America learned that performance and personality did not have to be expensive.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We weighted each 1965 car the way a historian, a road tester, and a collector would together, scoring on six axes:
- Significance and influence (25%) — Did the car change the market, launch a segment, or define a category? This carries the most weight because 1965 was a year of firsts.
- Design (20%) — How well has the styling aged, and how bold was it for the period?
- Performance (15%) — Real period horsepower, acceleration, and how it drove against rivals when new.
- Value in period (15%) — What a buyer got for the 1965 dollars asked.
- Driving character (10%) — Charm, drama, and the way the car feels in motion today.
- Collectibility now (15%) — Current demand and direction of values in the collector market.
Our figures draw on period road tests from *Car and Driver*, *Road & Track*, and *Motor Trend*, plus Hagerty valuation data, Mecum and Barrett-Jackson auction results, Conceptcarz production records, and the relevant Wikipedia model histories. Prices below are real 1965 base figures in period dollars.
1. Ford Mustang 🏆 BEST OVERALL
1965 MSRP: $2,372 | Best for: the buyer who wanted style, choice, and youth on a budget
The Mustang was the car that made 1965 a landmark year, and it remains the most important American car of the decade. The base six-cylinder coupe started near $2,372, but the real story was the engine catalog — a 200 cubic inch inline-six, a 289 V8 making 200 to 225 horsepower, and the legendary 289 "K-code" High Performance V8 rated at 271 horsepower.
Long hood, short deck, a galloping pony in the grille, and an options list that let a buyer build a secretary's commuter or a stoplight terror — the Mustang invented the "pony car" template that rivals chased for a decade. Today a clean 289 V8 coupe trades in the low-to-mid five figures, while K-code fastbacks and convertibles run well into six figures, so even the everyman version has become a blue-chip collector piece.
Pros:
- Defined an entire segment that Camaro, Firebird, and Challenger were built to chase
- Vast engine and trim range from frugal six to 271 hp K-code
- Styling that has aged better than nearly anything from the era
- Deep, affordable parts and restoration support today
Cons:
- Base six-cylinder cars are slow and softly sprung
- Sheer production volume means the common versions are not rare
Verdict: The most significant American car of 1965 and the easiest to love, then and now.
2. Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray (C2) 🏆
1965 MSRP: $4,321 | Best for: the enthusiast who wanted a genuine American sports car
The 1965 Corvette Sting Ray sat at the technical peak of the C2 generation, starting at $4,321 for the coupe and $4,106 for the convertible. It was a pivotal year: 1965 brought four-wheel disc brakes for the first time and offered both the last fuel-injected 327 (the 375 horsepower L84) and the brand-new big-block 396 L78 rated at 425 horsepower — a one-year-only engine before the 427 arrived.
The split-window had given way to a clean single rear glass, and the car's knife-edge fenders and sculpted flanks still look fast standing still. Collector values are strong across the board, with big-block and fuel-injected cars commanding well over six figures at Mecum and Barrett-Jackson.
Pros:
- America's only true world-class sports car of the era
- First-year four-wheel disc brakes and a 425 hp big-block option
- Independent rear suspension and superb period handling
- Rock-solid, appreciating collector values
Cons:
- Pricier than nearly everything else here when new
- Fiberglass and frame condition can hide expensive surprises
Verdict: The driver's choice of 1965 and a permanent blue-chip collectible.
3. Pontiac GTO 🏆
1965 MSRP: $2,787 | Best for: the buyer who wanted the muscle car that started it all
The GTO did not invent the formula of a big engine in a midsize body, but in 1965 it perfected and sold it, igniting the muscle car era in earnest. The hardtop started around $2,787, and under the hood sat a 389 cubic inch V8 making 335 horsepower, or 360 horsepower with the triple-carburetor Tri-Power setup.
Stacked headlights, a purposeful hood, and that growling 389 made the GTO the object of teenage desire in 1965, and sales soared past 75,000 units. Today a documented Tri-Power four-speed GTO is a six-figure car, while honest base examples remain attainable, making it one of the more liquid muscle car investments.
Pros:
- The car that turned the muscle movement into a stampede
- 389 Tri-Power V8 up to 360 hp
- Iconic stacked-headlight styling
- Strong, well-documented collector demand
Cons:
- Drum brakes and soft suspension reward respect over bravado
- Clone and tribute cars muddy the market, so documentation matters
Verdict: The defining muscle car of 1965 and a cornerstone of any collection.
4. Buick Riviera 🏆
1965 MSRP: $4,318 | Best for: the buyer who wanted personal luxury with knife-edge style
The 1965 Riviera was the final and finest year of the first-generation design, and many consider it the most beautiful American car of the decade. Starting near $4,318, the 1965 model finally got the clamshell hidden headlights that designer Bill Mitchell had wanted from the start, tucked behind the leading edges of the front fenders.
Power came from a 401 or 425 cubic inch V8, and the Gran Sport package added a dual-quad 425 making 360 horsepower for roughly $450 more. Crisp, low, and tailored, the 1965 Riviera looked like a custom coachbuilt car at a Buick price. Clean examples and especially Gran Sport cars have appreciated steadily as design-driven collectors have rediscovered them.
Pros:
- One of the best-looking American cars ever built
- One-year-only hidden clamshell headlights
- Optional 360 hp dual-quad Gran Sport 425 V8
- Still undervalued relative to its design significance
Cons:
- Big and heavy, more grand tourer than corner-carver
- Hidden headlight mechanisms can be costly to restore correctly
Verdict: The styling peak of 1965 and a quietly brilliant collector buy.
5. Shelby GT350 🏆
1965 MSRP: $4,547 | Best for: the buyer who wanted a street-legal race car
Carroll Shelby took the new Mustang fastback and turned it into a genuine homologated racer, and the 1965 GT350 is the most valuable and revered Mustang variant of the year. Priced at $4,547, the GT350 started with the High Performance 289, then added a high-rise aluminum intake, a Holley four-barrel, Tri-Y headers, and glasspack exhaust to make 306 horsepower.
At roughly 2,800 pounds it ran to 60 mph in about 6.5 seconds and dominated SCCA B-Production racing. Few were built, and that rarity shows: clean 1965 GT350 street cars average well into the mid-six-figure range at Hagerty and at auction, with race-history cars far beyond.
Pros:
- A genuine homologation special with real race pedigree
- 306 hp track-bred 289 V8
- Extreme rarity and a championship history
- Among the strongest appreciating American cars of the era
Cons:
- Raw, loud, and unapologetically stiff to live with
- Now priced beyond the reach of most enthusiasts
Verdict: The hardest-core American car of 1965 and a true blue-chip collectible.
6. Lincoln Continental 🏆
1965 MSRP: $6,292 | Best for: the buyer who wanted understated, presidential luxury
If the Riviera was the era's beauty, the slab-sided Lincoln Continental was its statesman, and 1965 was the final year of its landmark Elwood Engel design. Starting at roughly $6,292 for the sedan and near $6,800 for the convertible, it was the most expensive car on this list, and it looked every dollar of it.
The rear-hinged center-opening "suicide" doors and clean, uncluttered flanks made it the choice of presidents and CEOs. A 430 cubic inch V8 making 320 horsepower moved its considerable mass with dignity. The four-door convertible, with just 3,356 built, is the prize today, and well-kept examples have become serious collector cars.
Pros:
- One of the most dignified designs in American history
- Iconic rear-hinged suicide doors
- 320 hp 430 V8 and limousine-grade refinement
- Rare convertibles are genuinely collectible
Cons:
- Heavy and complex, with expensive convertible top mechanisms
- The priciest car here to buy new and to restore
Verdict: The luxury statement of 1965 and an icon of restrained design.
7. Plymouth Barracuda Formula S 💎 BEST VALUE
1965 MSRP: $2,535 | Best for: the budget buyer who wanted fastback style and real handling
The Barracuda gets our Best Value nod because it delivered fastback drama and a genuinely sporting chassis for Mustang money. The base car started at $2,535, and the Formula S package added roughly $258 for an upgraded 273 cubic inch V8 making 235 horsepower, a heavy-duty suspension, a tachometer, and wide tires.
Its enormous wraparound rear glass was the largest piece of automotive glass of its day, and the underrated A-body handling made it a sharper-steering car than many of its rivals. Values remain a relative bargain — Formula S cars trade in the teens to low forties depending on condition, far under comparable Mustangs.
Pros:
- Genuine fastback style and the biggest rear glass of its era
- 235 hp Formula S 273 V8 with sport-tuned handling
- Excellent value then and a relative bargain now
- A rarer sight at shows than the ubiquitous Mustang
Cons:
- Lived in the Mustang's shadow and never sold in big numbers
- Interior trim and that huge backlight can be hard to source
Verdict: The smart-money pick of 1965 — character and capability without the premium.
8. Oldsmobile 442 🏆
1965 MSRP: $2,800 | Best for: the buyer who wanted a muscle car with manners
The 1965 442 was Oldsmobile's answer to the GTO, and it brought a more refined, better-balanced approach to the muscle formula. For roughly $2,800 all in, buyers got a new 400 cubic inch V8 making 345 horsepower and 440 pound-feet of torque, paired with the heavy-duty suspension that gave the car its sure-footed reputation.
The "4-4-2" name famously stood for four-barrel carb, four-speed transmission, and dual exhaust. Quieter in the market than the GTO, the 442 is now prized by collectors who value its blend of grunt and composure, and clean four-speed cars have climbed steadily at auction.
Pros:
- New 400 V8 making 345 hp and a stout 440 lb-ft
- Best-handling of the early A-body muscle cars
- Underrated relative to the GTO, which keeps prices sane
- Strong, steadily rising collector interest
Cons:
- Lower period sales mean parts can be harder to find than GM rivals
- Less name recognition than the GTO it chased
Verdict: The thinking enthusiast's muscle car of 1965 and a savvy collector buy.
9. Chevrolet Impala SS 396 🏆
1965 MSRP: $2,839 | Best for: the buyer who wanted a full-size family hauler with big-block punch
The 1965 Impala helped Chevrolet sell over a million full-size cars, a record that still stands, and the SS 396 was its muscular crown. The Super Sport started near $2,839, and the new 396 cubic inch L78 big-block was rated at 425 horsepower — a one-year-only powerplant installed in just 1,838 full-size Chevys before the 427 arrived.
With its swooping new "Coke-bottle" body and full-size comfort, the SS 396 was a freeway bruiser that could seat six. Those rare genuine L78 cars are highly sought, while small-block SS coupes remain a relatively attainable way into the most popular American car of its year.
Pros:
- Part of the best-selling full-size American car ever
- Rare one-year 396 L78 big-block rated at 425 hp
- Handsome new Coke-bottle styling
- Small-block SS versions remain affordable entry points
Cons:
- Big and soft; this is a cruiser, not a corner-carver
- Genuine 396 L78 cars are scarce and command a premium
Verdict: The full-size muscle statement of 1965 and a piece of sales history.
10. Ford Thunderbird 🏆
1965 MSRP: $4,486 | Best for: the buyer who wanted personal luxury and effortless cruising
The fourth-generation Thunderbird rounds out our 1965 ten as the original personal luxury car, refined into a smooth, jet-age cruiser. Starting near $4,486, the 1965 T-Bird carried a 390 cubic inch V8 making 300 horsepower through a Cruise-O-Matic automatic, and 1965 added standard front disc brakes and sequential turn signals — a genuinely novel touch for the year.
Long, low, and dripping with chrome, the Thunderbird traded outright performance for boulevard serenity and a richly trimmed cabin. It is one of the more affordable entries here in the collector market today, which makes a clean, well-sorted example one of the best ways to own genuine 1960s style on a budget.
Pros:
- The car that created the personal luxury segment
- Standard front disc brakes and signature sequential turn signals
- Smooth 300 hp 390 V8 and a sumptuous cabin
- One of the most affordable classics on this list today
Cons:
- Heavy and soft, with leisurely real-world acceleration
- Complex power accessories can be troublesome to restore
Verdict: The personal luxury pioneer of 1965 and an accessible way into the era.
Buyer Decision Tree — Which One Was Right for You?
What to Look For in a 1965 Classic (Then and as a Collector Car Now)
- Rust is the number-one enemy. Inspect floor pans, trunk floors, lower fenders, rocker panels, and the area around the rear window, especially on the Barracuda's huge backlight and the Riviera's lower body. Hidden corrosion can dwarf the purchase price.
- Numbers-matching drivetrains command a premium. Verify engine casting dates and codes against the VIN and build documentation. A genuine K-code Mustang, Tri-Power GTO, or 396 Impala is worth far more than a tribute, and clones are common.
- Restoration cost can exceed the car. Plan for chrome, glass, interior trim, and the complex power accessories on luxury cars like the Continental and Thunderbird, where convertible tops and hidden headlight motors are expensive to make right.
- Documentation drives value. Original window stickers, build sheets, dealer invoices, and Marti reports or Pontiac PHS records can add thousands and protect you from a misrepresented car.
- Originality matters less than nostalgia implies. For many buyers, a beautifully driven, slightly modified survivor delivers more joy per dollar than a trailer-queen restoration. Unless you are chasing the very top of the market, condition and how the car drives often matter more than absolute factory correctness.
FAQ
What was the best classic American car of 1965? The Ford Mustang earns our Best Overall pick for 1965 on the strength of its market-defining significance, its broad engine range, its timeless styling, and its enduring collectibility. The Corvette Sting Ray is the close runner-up for outright driving ability.
Which 1965 classic was the best value? The Plymouth Barracuda Formula S is our Best Value pick. Starting near $2,535 with the $258 Formula S package, it offered genuine fastback style, a 235 hp 273 V8, and sharp handling for Mustang money, and it remains a relative bargain in the collector market today.
What made 1965 such a landmark year for American cars? It was the Mustang's first full sales year, the year the Pontiac GTO turned the muscle car into a national craze, and the design peak of the Buick Riviera and the Lincoln Continental. Few single years produced so many milestones at once.
How much did these cars cost new in 1965? Period base prices ranged from about $2,372 for a base Mustang up to roughly $6,292 for a Lincoln Continental sedan. Most of the muscle and sporty picks landed between $2,500 and $4,500 in 1965 dollars.
Which 1965 classics are the most collectible now? The Shelby GT350, the fuel-injected and big-block Corvettes, and documented Tri-Power GTOs sit at the top, regularly trading into six figures. The Riviera and Oldsmobile 442 are strong, somewhat undervalued buys with room to climb.
Are 1965 muscle cars a good investment today? Documented, numbers-matching examples have appreciated steadily for years, but condition, originality, and paperwork drive value enormously. Clones and tribute cars trade well under genuine articles, so verification is essential before buying.
Bottom Line
Six decades on, 1965 stands as the year American cars found their swagger. The Ford Mustang is our Best Overall pick because no other car of the year did more to reshape the market, and it remains the most beloved and accessible icon of the era. The Plymouth Barracuda Formula S is our Best Value pick, proving that fastback style and real handling did not require a premium badge.
Between those two bookends sit the Corvette's world-class engineering, the GTO's muscle-car thunder, the Riviera's design brilliance, and the Continental's quiet dignity — a top ten that, taken together, explains why collectors still chase 1965 American iron harder than almost any other year.
Sources
- Hagerty Valuation Tools — 1965 Ford Mustang, Corvette, Shelby GT350, Buick Riviera, Lincoln Continental, Plymouth Barracuda, Thunderbird model pages (hagerty.com/valuation-tools)
- Supercars.net — 1965 Pontiac GTO and 1965 Chevrolet Corvette Sting Ray L78 396/425 hp profiles
- Conceptcarz — 1965 Lincoln Continental, Buick Riviera, and Oldsmobile 442 specifications and production figures
- Wikipedia — Ford Mustang (first generation), Ford Thunderbird (fourth generation), Pontiac GTO, and Shelby Mustang model histories
- Hagerty Media — "Classic Classified: 1965 Chevrolet Impala SS 396" and 1965 market commentary
- MustangSpecs.com — 1965 Shelby GT350 in-depth guide and specifications
- Old Cars Weekly — "Car of the Week: 1965 Chevrolet Impala SS 396"
- CorvSport.com — 1965 C2 Corvette history, performance, and engine option data
- Barn Finds and autoevolution — period 1965 Barracuda Formula S and Oldsmobile 442 documentation and pricing
- Mecum Auctions and Barrett-Jackson — recent 1965 American classic auction results
*Classic car review — 1965 classic car reviews, rating, best classic car 1965, and a retrospective review of the top vintage American car picks for buyers and collectors.*