Home » 2005 Bentley Continental vs 2005 Jeep Wrangler: Which One Are You Blowing Forty Grand On?

2005 Bentley Continental vs 2005 Jeep Wrangler: Which One Are You Blowing Forty Grand On?

Sbsd 10 3 2025

This week, we’ve been looking at the class of 2005 in cars, and we’re going to finish it out by blowing the budget to smithereens. Today’s cars are both just about the same price now, but one of them is much cheaper than it was new, while the other is considerably more expensive. Which one is a better deal will be up to you.

Yesterday, we looked at a couple of boxy wagony things that have become legends over the past two decades, and are both still sought-after today. Everybody had a story about one of these or the other, and I do always enjoy hearing them. From the comments, I expected it to be a fair fight, but the Honda Element just blew all four normal-opening doors right off the Scion xB.

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I’m not so sure that’s the right call. All things being equal, if the choice is between an Element and an xB, I’ll take the Element. But between these two examples, I think I’d feel better about the xB. I didn’t do my due diligence about that Element; it appears that the interior photos were stolen from another ad. It seemed a little hinky, with the mismatched door sills, but I let it slide, and I shouldn’t have. If the seller of the Element is stealing photos from other ads, what other fast ones are they trying to pull? In this case, I think the sketchy SE 82nd Ave dealership in Portland is actually the more honest seller. Scary thought.

Screenshot From 2025 10 02 16 43 51

Generally speaking, unless you’re talking about rare classics, cars depreciate from the day you drive them off the lot. Never look up the blue book value of a car you just bought new; it’s a number you really don’t want to see. And it just gets worse as time goes on. But sometimes, rarity and desirability can combine to raise a car’s value before it reaches classic status, so it ends up costing significantly more used than it ever did new. Is it worth it? Well, that’s up to the buyer; you can consult all the price guides you want, but in the end, a car is worth exactly what someone is willing to pay for it on the day it sells, and not a penny more or less.

One of today’s cars is a high-end luxury car, and as you may expect, its value has dropped like a rock, and hasn’t yet bottomed out. The other is a very rare version of a common vehicle in excellent condition and with low mileage. Somehow, their prices have crossed paths, and either one will set you back $40,000, give or take. Let’s take a look.

2005 Bentley Continental GT – $42,500

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: Twin-turbocharged 6.0-liter DOHC W12, six-speed automatic, AWD

Location: Oakland Hills, CA

Odometer reading: 40,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

The story of Bentley, as is the story of so many British car marques, is one of a long tradition of very cool cars set against a backdrop of mergers, acquisitions, bankruptcies, fights over trademarks, and eventual watering-down by a new corporate owner. This Continental GT can trace its lineage back a hundred years, to the heady days of Brooklands and the Blue Train Races, but mechanically, it has a lot in common with an Audi.

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Image: Craigslist seller

High-performance Bentleys have always had some pretty bonkers engines, from the enormous and sometimes supercharged inline sixes of the 1920s, to the turbocharged Rolls-Royce V8s of the 1980s and ’90s. But new corporate owner Volkswagen brought its own special sauce to the Bentley recipe in the form of its W12 engine, here sporting twin turbochargers and putting out 552 horsepower. It’s an engine no sane person would devise, but that makes it kinda perfect for a car like this. Power is important, yes, but having that power delivered with a bit of panache and flair is crucial. The W12 drives all four wheels through a six-speed ZF automatic with “Tiptronic” manual shifting capability. It runs and drives great, and has “no mechanical issues,” according to the seller.

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Image: Craigslist seller

If you hate the blandness and sameness of modern car interiors, the solution is to buy a Bentley. Look at this glorious cockpit. It’s all real leather and real wood, of course, and all done by hand. The seller says the headliner has just been redone; apparently, droopy headliners are a common problem with these cars. The window regulators are new, too, and everything else works well.

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Image: Craigslist seller

There’s no mistaking the styling of this car for anything else, and that’s kind of the point, too. Why bother buying a Bentley if everyone doesn’t know it’s a Bentley? The two-tone job is a partial wrap; the silver is vinyl, and the darker gray is the paint color. It’s removable if you don’t like it, but I think it looks good.

2005 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Rubicon Sahara Edition – $39,975

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Image: Craigslist seller

Engine/drivetrain: 4.0-liter OHV inline 6, four-speed automatic, 4WD

Location: Mesa, AZ

Odometer reading: 65,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

What’s cooler than a Jeep? More Jeep! Stretching the wheelbase of the old CJ-7 to create the CJ-8 Scrambler made it way cooler, and I’m not just saying that as someone who learned to drive in one. The Scrambler only lasted a few years in the early 1980s, but in 2004 Jeep did it again, with the LJ Wrangler Unlimited, a TJ Wrangler with an extra foot and a half of Jeepy goodness. The Unlimited only lasted for three model years, and in 2005 Jeep produced the special “Sahara Edition” as a tie-in with the action adventure movie Sahara, which I think I’ve seen but I can’t really remember. Only 1,000 Sahara Edition Wrangler Unlimiteds were built; this is number 968.

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Image: Craigslist seller

As rare as this special edition Jeep might be, its mechanicals are tried-and-true: the old AMC 4.0 liter inline six, a Chrysler four-speed automatic, and on-demand four-wheel-drive. Since the Sahara Edition is also a Rubicon model, it includes all the off-road goodies that go along with that badge, like lockable diffs, a 4:1 low range in the transfer case, and bigger wheels and tires. This one has only 65,000 miles on it, and hasn’t seen much, if any, off-road action. It runs and drives just fine, and I think the biggest problem would be refraining from treating it like a Jeep and ruining its value.

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Image: Craigslist seller

There is a distinct lack of good interior photos in this ad; this is about as good as it gets. There is another photo showing the upholstery under that towel on the seat, and it’s in beautiful shape. Another photo shows a crack in the plastic of one door panel, but the rest of the interior looks showroom new. It has some aftermarket power-retractable running boards, but the seller says there’s an issue with the passenger side one.

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Image: Craigslist seller

It’s near-perfect outside too, and the seller says it has always been garaged. I suppose that’s good for keeping the value up, but in my opinion, Jeeps were never meant to be collectors’ items – no matter how rare. This thing shouldn’t have reached 20 years old in this condition; it should have dings and scrapes and another hundred thousand miles on the odometer. It should be festooned with stickers from national parks and tourist traps. It’s one of a thousand special edition models from a movie no one remembers, so who cares about its collectibility? Someone please buy this thing and give it the hard-knock life it deserves.

According to Edmunds, the Bentley sold new for about $155,000, and the Jeep for around $28,000. One has lost more than a hundred and ten grand in value, and the other has gained about ten. But which one is the better deal at its new price? You’ve got all weekend to think about it. See you back here on Monday!

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06dak
06dak
5 months ago

Holy F I have not seen a more insane price for anything used in quite a while than that Wrangler… what the hell is that guy thinking?

One, there was no Rubicon Sahara; if fact there wasn’t even a Sahara in 2005. It’s just Rubicon with some stickers and swapped seat trim, which makes you wonder who and when that was done (and for what reason).
Two, it’s the 2nd best Wrangler for that year. If it had a manual it would be the best. These things will barely do 75 in a head wind with the Rubicon gearing and the slushbox!
Three, it’s got 65k on it so it’s not a museum quality like the price suggests
Four, it’s in a lame color, especially for a wrangler.

I love, love, love LJs but this one is way too overpriced for me to vote for.

MATTinMKE
Member
MATTinMKE
5 months ago

No brainer. Ride in luxury baby!

It's Pronounced Porch-ah
Member
It's Pronounced Porch-ah
5 months ago

If you want top dollar for your vehicle fix the stupid shit, $40k for a Jeep with an automatic running board that doesn’t deploy? Either remove the running boards, repair the broken one, or replace them with something else. Ditto the cracked plastic door panel, find a replacement on eBay. The price is indefensible unless it is PERFECT and then I still think its crazy, but I am not here to yuck yums.

Bentley is cooler anyway, by the time I die $40k will be the going rate of a funeral so maybe I will just buy my casket now and enjoy it for awhile.

Spikersaurusrex
Member
Spikersaurusrex
5 months ago

It’s hilarious to see the Bentley winning based on the Jeep’s price, not it’s own Bentleyness.

Squirrelmaster
Member
Squirrelmaster
5 months ago

That Jeep has been all over the Jeep forums all year. As silly as the price seems, and it absolutely is, it isn’t without precedent because TJ Rubicons are silly expensive post-pandemic and similar condition ones trade in the upper-20s to mid-30s regularly.

I love my TJ, but I was only willing to spend four-figures on one, and that still holds true. Financially irresponsible and crippling Bentley for me, please!

JDE
JDE
5 months ago
Reply to  Squirrelmaster

it is because of the LJ status, basically the little gap between the rear fender and the door. They have become the Holy Grail of Wranglers. Why they don’t take the basic 2 door version of the current wrangler and make it a 103 inch wheel base instead of just 96 to cash in on this is beyond me.

Though I will also say, I would be curious if they could get 200 HP and Maybe 240 FT-lbs of torque from the 3.0 without a turbo? I think they could really cash in on a base motor with 6 in a row and simple/reliable setup. the 3.6 and even the more recent turbsky 4 banger seems to be pretty packed into the engine bay. Maybe without the V and a hair dryer the inline 3.0 could be accessible to do trail repairs a bit more simply?

EastbayLoc
EastbayLoc
5 months ago

Bentley! All the way! I’ll drive it for a while and then sell it and buy a nice Jeep for a sane price and take it to the trails.

Last edited 5 months ago by EastbayLoc
TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
5 months ago

I wouldn’t take the Jeep at half the price. So we’re adding British reliability Luxury to the garage.

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
5 months ago

Wrangler Unlimited Sahara Edition:
WURSE
‘Nuff said…

Collegiate Autodidact
Collegiate Autodidact
5 months ago

D’oh! Drifting off to sleep tonight I realized I made a mistake, thanks to posting my comment while brewing my coffee this morning, there’s no ‘R’ as a first letter in the Jeep’s name so it’s actually WUSE.
Lesson learned: either don’t post a comment before having had coffee or do a better job of proofreading before posting (ideally post-coffee) *facepalm*

Clark B
Member
Clark B
5 months ago

Definitely the Bentley. I even know just the independent shop I’d take it to for repairs. I couldn’t justify spending that much money on that Jeep. If I had a Jeep, I would want to off-road it, and that one is far too expensive to consider doing that.

A Tangle of Kraken
Member
A Tangle of Kraken
5 months ago

“but mechanically, it has a lot in common with an Audi.” – I’ll pass. Sure, $42.5k now, but how much more by next year?

[original] “Jeep for around $28,000.” !?!?

How about neither and get a GR86 or a Miata for a little less?

MATTinMKE
Member
MATTinMKE
5 months ago

This is the real life answer. Lots of interesting things available for 40K.

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
5 months ago

Today’s Shitbox Showdown:

Are you an idiot, or a fucking idiot?

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
5 months ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Regular idiot today! (That means Bentley, right?)

PlugInPA
Member
PlugInPA
5 months ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Which is which?

ChefCJ
ChefCJ
5 months ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

Oh I think you could make a case for either and not be wrong.

MATTinMKE
Member
MATTinMKE
5 months ago
Reply to  ChefCJ

Yes, yes I am.

Drew
Member
Drew
5 months ago

I appreciate that the Jeep is a 2-door. That is not enough for me to appreciate that price.

Rob Stercraw
Rob Stercraw
5 months ago

You dont remember Sahara? Ship of Death? Steve Zahn’s deadpan “Hi! How are ya?”

SirRaoulDuke
SirRaoulDuke
5 months ago

The Jeep seller is higher than giraffe balls if he thinks he will get $40k.

Urban Runabout
Member
Urban Runabout
5 months ago

$40,000 for a 20 year old Jeep is solidly stayed-out-in-the-Arizona-sun-too-long crackpot territory

I’ll take the Bentley every day and twice on Sundays.

Last edited 5 months ago by Urban Runabout
Pat Battle-Ship
Member
Pat Battle-Ship
5 months ago

I’m buying the Bentley, enjoying some fall road trips, taking it on the Road and Track Blue Ridge 500 or similar then hopefully getting out of it before then snow falls and anything needs to be fixed.

Angry Bob
Member
Angry Bob
5 months ago

While the TJ Rubicon is, in my opinion, the best Jeep ever made, the price is crazy.

Mechjaz
Member
Mechjaz
5 months ago

With all respect, I’m jumping right past the article to shout Bentley from the rooftops. Or like, article… Basement. Whatever the comments are. Bentley all the way.

Adam Al-Asmar
Adam Al-Asmar
5 months ago

$38k will get you a baby blue GTC convertible with a mite better styling. In this case of jeep vs Bentley, the Bentley wins since the jeep owner is on crack.

Elhigh
Elhigh
5 months ago

A Bentley for $40k makes you ask, even for one that’s 20 years old: what’s wrong with it?

A Wrangler for $40k makes you ask, especially for one that’s 20 years old, what’s wrong with you?

For a Wrangler that old, the only way I’m dropping forty large on it is if there’s a bag with $30,000 in the passenger seat that comes with it. Especially with the four-speed auto aboard, just no way. That’s a fast way to wind up walking, and you get a Wrangler specifically to avoid walking in even more places than most people.

I can’t believe I’m writing this with a straight face, I think I’d go for the Bentley.

Matthew Lange
Matthew Lange
5 months ago

I voted Bentley because it is the one I’d rather have but $42,000 is strong money for a 2005. A quick search turns up some 2008 examples for similar money and the later cars have some mild styling upgrades which are worth having IMO.

Spikedlemon
Spikedlemon
5 months ago

I could pay for quite a few Uber drives with $40k.

Hautewheels
Member
Hautewheels
5 months ago
Reply to  Spikedlemon

But just think of all the dollars you could make as an Uber driver in a friggin’ Bentley!

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
5 months ago

That Wrangler owner is OUT OF THEIR GADAMN MIND!!!!!

I test drove one of these new. It was a shitbox then, and now it’s a wildly overpriced shitbox.

John
John
5 months ago

At $40K, what am I missing on a 20 year old Jeep with 65K on the clock? Was this the secret limited edition “There’s a big box-o-krugerrands hidden in the rocker panels” edition?

A Tangle of Kraken
Member
A Tangle of Kraken
5 months ago
Reply to  John

Always check the rocker panels!

James Davidson
James Davidson
5 months ago

For rust!

Max Headbolts
Member
Max Headbolts
5 months ago

I’ve owned a 2005 Wrangler, I have not owned a 2005 Bentley. If I’m blowing 40K on a 20 year old car, I’m doing it in style!

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