Home » Choose Your Favorite Not-Really-A-Dodge: 1991 Monaco vs 2002 Stratus Coupe

Choose Your Favorite Not-Really-A-Dodge: 1991 Monaco vs 2002 Stratus Coupe

Sbsd 12 8 2025
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The history of Chrysler over the past fifty years or so is a long and sordid tale of joint ventures, bailouts, purchases, sales, and mergers, leading to its current situation as part of a giant conglomerate with a dumb name. All of these marriages and divorces left behind some strange step-kids, cars that wear the badges of old Chrysler brands, but have nothing to do with its current offerings. For your consideration today, I have found two clean low-mileage examples of such cars.

Friday’s final four were a motley bunch, with a little something for everyone. The Fiat 500 won, followed by the Plymouth Valiant wagon, then the world’s nicest Chevy S-10 Blazer, and the cheap New Yorker brought up the rear.

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This is the order I’d put them in, too. That little Fiat looks like a lot of fun, but I’d be sorely tempted by the Valiant wagon too. The Blazer would be an interesting conversation piece, but I still don’t know what I’d do with it. And the Chrysler New Yorker would make a fine winter beater for someone, or first car for a kid, but it’s not something I want.

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Vehicles with a Chrysler, Plymouth, or Dodge nameplate on them have been made by, or had components from, Mitsubishi, Renault, Mercedes-Benz, Hillman, Volkswagen, Talbot, and probably some others I’m forgetting. Not all at once, of course, but sometimes in the same showroom at the same time. The company’s boom-and-bust fortunes over the past several decades have left behind a trail of cast-off cars, some of which you probably remember, others you may have forgotten. Today we’re going to take a look at a couple of them, and dig into a little bit of the twisted history that created them.

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1991 Dodge Monaco LE – $5,400

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

Engine/drivetrain: 3.0-liter OHC V6, four-speed automatic, FWD

Location: Emmaus, PA

Odometer reading: 24,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

Chrysler went from near-bankruptcy in 1978 to having enough money to buy AMC in 1987, thanks to the success of the K cars and the minivans. Jeep was the real prize, but a lot of other AMC products came along for the ride. Among those was a big sedan that AMC had been developing with its partner Renault: the Premier. Chrysler created a new division as a home for these AMC leftovers: Eagle. This car is exactly the same thing as an Eagle Premier, but it wears a Dodge grille, and a famous Dodge model name.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

The heart of the revived Dodge Monaco, and its whole reason for existing, is the infamous PRV (Peugeot-Renault-Volvo) V6 engine. As part of the AMC purchase deal, Chrysler had to fulfill a purchase contract for these infernal things. Eagle wasn’t selling enough Premiers, so Chrysler decided to sell a version of the car through its higher-volume Dodge dealerships. This Monaco is practically new; it has had two owners, each of whom put about twelve thousand miles on it. The seller says it runs and drives great, but the serpentine belt squeals when you turn on the air conditioning. A new belt and tensioner are probably in order.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

Inside, it’s as clean as you would expect for such low miles. These are really comfy cars, too. One thing I should warn you about, though, is that unlike Dodge’s own 1991 lineup, the Monaco does not have a driver’s side airbag to fulfill its passive-restraint requirement. Instead, it relies on automatic shoulder harnesses and manual lap belts. I know. I hate them too.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

The first owner kept it in the garage, while the second, it sounds like, left it out in a hailstorm. As a result, it has nice shiny paint, and a few dents. Adding to this car’s mixed pedigree is its styling: it was designed by Giorgietto Giugiaro, of DeTomaso Mangusta, Lotus Esprit, and VW Rabbit fame. If you’re playing the “six degrees of separation” game with cars instead of celebrities, the Dodge Monaco is the car equivalent of Kevin Bacon.

2002 Dodge Stratus SE Coupe – $3,500

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

Engine/drivetrain: 2.4-liter DOHC inline 4, four-speed automatic, FWD

Location: Mechanicsville, VA

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Odometer reading: 72,000 miles

Operational status: Runs and drives well

Chrysler and Mitsubishi first crossed paths way back in 1971, when Dodge started selling the Mitsubishi Colt Galant as the Dodge Colt. In the mid-1980s, the two companies started a joint venture, called Diamond-Star Motors, and built a factory in Normal, Illinois to build a line of sporty coupes bearing both companies’ badges. Among these was this car, the Dodge Stratus coupe, not to be confused with the Dodge Stratus sedan, which was Chrysler’s own design, built in Sterling Heights, Michigan.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

Adding to the confusion is that both the Stratus coupe and sedan use 2.4-liter four-cylinder engines, but they’re different engines. This Stratus coupe is powered by a Mitsubishi engine, shared with the Mitsubishi Eclipse, also built at Diamond-Star Motors. This car was also first owned by an elderly driver, who took excellent care of it but didn’t drive it much. It has a little under 72,000 miles on it total, 20,000 of which were added by its seller. It has had a lot of recent work done, and it runs and drives great.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

It’s in decent shape inside, but the dash top has some cracks. The seller has covered it with one of those custom-fit toupees, but personally, I think I’d rather just see the cracks. I’ve never seen a car with dual airbags with one of those covers, and I get the feeling that being hit in the face by what’s essentially a floormat if the airbag goes off would be a bad idea.

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Image: Facebook Marketplace seller

It was recently repainted, and it looks great. Yeah, it’s just boring silver, but it’s shiny. One fault that the seller does note is that the sunroof is non-operational; it will open, but they had to take it to a body shop to get it closed again. It doesn’t leak, but leave that button alone.

Dig back far enough in the history of almost any car company, and you’ll find some bizarre connections between them: engines bought by one company from a competitor, joint ventures that don’t seem to make sense, captive imports that were’t really imported at all. Neither of these two has anything to do with Dodge’s current offerings, and they didn’t have anything in common with any other Dodges in their own time, either. But that’s what makes them interesting, especially to someone like me with essentially zero brand loyalty and a love of oddball cars. Both of these are well-preserved examples of their type. Which one do you prefer?

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Dogisbadob
Dogisbadob
1 month ago

That Monaco is crackhead priced, so I voted for the LWB Eclipse

Hangover Grenade
Hangover Grenade
1 month ago

If you’re playing the “six degrees of separation” game with cars instead of celebrities, the Dodge Monaco is the car equivalent of Kevin Bacon.

I know my six degrees from Kevin Bacon: my ex-girlfriend’s mother’s friend was one of his makeup artists.

That being said, I think the Monaco is the more interesting car for sure.

My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
Member
My Other Car is a Tetanus Shot
1 month ago

The Normal-built car that’s in Mechanicsville looks like the more pleasant cloud to waft along for me, domo arigato.

Brampton Assembly is in Canada and some Canadians do speak French, but they do not live in Brampton. That engine may be a mutt from Europe, but that car is about as Monaco as Kraft American Cheese Singles are proper fromage.

Mister Squishy for me.

Steve Wilson
Member
Steve Wilson
1 month ago

At equal prices, I’d pick the Monaco just because they’re so rarely seen and the styling is appealing. That one’s way too high. The Stratus seems a good deal, so I’ll try to put aside my aversion to mushy, slow cars in sporty costumes.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
1 month ago

Gotta be the Monaco. It’s a really clean looking example of a car which did the boxy proportions correctly.

Taargus Taargus
Member
Taargus Taargus
1 month ago

My family has a curse against the Stratus name, so I will not be voting for it.

I’ll take the Monaco.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
1 month ago

That last Monaco is just too rare and unusual to resist. It’s Franco-American!

Data
Data
1 month ago

Are the Spaghettio’s in the trunk?

D-dub
Member
D-dub
1 month ago

It is rare, but it’s also a textbook example of “rare <> valuable”. $5400 is daydream pricing.

Clark B
Member
Clark B
1 month ago

I have never, ever liked the look of the Stratus. Though I will say this is the first one I’ve seen in a long time that doesn’t look beaten to within an inch of its life.

I’ll take the Monaco I suppose.

10001010
Member
10001010
1 month ago

As a previous owner of 2 DSMs (91 Talon AWD and 97 Eclipse GSX) and 3 other Mitz sportscars before that, their only redeeming quality is how much fun the sporty ones are to drive. They all suffered reliability issues but when they were running you couldn’t have more fun on 4 wheels so you put up with it. This Stratus has the DSM reliability but it ain’t one of the sporty ones.
The Monaco is, well, a Monaco.

Beasy Mist
Member
Beasy Mist
1 month ago

In a world where I hate them both the Stratus at least has a chance at being repaired.

Pneumatic Tool
Pneumatic Tool
1 month ago

The Monaco is close enough that I could check it out firsthand, but I’m not thinking that I want to. These badge mix cars were the best that Chrysler could do in the fight against Taurus. They were maybe somewhat interesting in the Euromix at the time – if you squint, they almost look like an Audi of the era – but that’s where the comparison ends. The Stratus looks good, and would be perfectly fine as an inexpensive everyday ride or first car.

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
1 month ago

I’ve never seen one of those Monacos, nor did I know they exist. Good fucking luck finding parts for that ugly box.

At least the Stratus looks decent. I don’t want it, and I cannot believe somebody spent the money to repaint it, but I would be fine commuting in that for a while.

Grey alien in a beige sedan
Member
Grey alien in a beige sedan
1 month ago
Reply to  Shop-Teacher

The Monaco was a parts bin special… ergo, most of the mechanicals should be decently easy to find. What’s gonna kill ya though, is attempting to source body panels, trim pieces, etc.

Michael Beranek
Member
Michael Beranek
1 month ago

You’ll just have to spend some money over at Rocher Auto. Toutes les pièces dont votre voiture pourrait avoir besoin.

67Mustang
67Mustang
1 month ago

Neither
Voted Stratus just because I wanted to participate

PlugInPA
Member
PlugInPA
1 month ago

That Monaco is so close to me that I could probably locate it by bicycle, but I think I’d rather bike back home too than pay $5,400 for a 1991 Dodge.

Pneumatic Tool
Pneumatic Tool
1 month ago
Reply to  PlugInPA

Well hello neighbor! (I live in Fleetwood)

PlugInPA
Member
PlugInPA
1 month ago
Reply to  Pneumatic Tool

*waves via the roundabouts on 222*

TriangleRAD
Member
TriangleRAD
1 month ago

It should also be noted that the Premier/Monaco represent the genesis of the Cab Forward design ethos that matured with the later LH cars (Dodge Intrepid, Eagle Vision, Chrysler Concorde). This includes the longitudinal FWD drivetrain configuration.

As for the Stratus coupe, SWG should definitely be interested. The Stratus would share many underhood components with my 1990 Dodge Ram 50 – both use versions of the 4G64 engine. I test drove one of these with a manual around 2002, I don’t recall anything truly notable about it. Styling-wise I preferred the Stratus’ sister, the Chrysler Sebring Coupe. The 2001-02 models had a vaguely Aston-Martin-ish look to them IMO.

I think I’ll take the Monaco today simply because of its oddness, rarity and RADwood potential.

Last edited 1 month ago by TriangleRAD
Ranwhenparked
Member
Ranwhenparked
1 month ago
Reply to  TriangleRAD

Yeah, the LH cars were basically the Premier, reworked just enough to eliminate the need for royalties to Renault

Stephen Walter Gossin
Stephen Walter Gossin
1 month ago
Reply to  TriangleRAD

I immediately clicked on this Showdown as soon as I saw that glorious Stratus jump off the screen!

Thanks for the shout-out, TriangleRAD!

Gen3 Volt
Member
Gen3 Volt
1 month ago

I wanted to go to Monaco, it seemed worth risking my life without an airbag for its weirdness and cleanliness.

Then I learned that its very clean jellybean shaped competitor had the same drivetrain as our late, lamented Mitsu Outlander, a stump pulling rugged thing that didn’t suck down too much gas. I rarely needed its cargo capability nor ability to drive over curbs to get creative with parking spots back then and I sure don’t need it much any more.

And with all the Internet dollars I’ll save, I’ll buy y’all Internet cocktails.

TheDrunkenWrench
Member
TheDrunkenWrench
1 month ago

If I don’t go for the Stratus, I fear Stephen Walter Gossin will ascend from his evil wrenching lair and scold me endlessly for abandoning one of the best cars ever.

Stephen Walter Gossin
Stephen Walter Gossin
1 month ago

Mark summoned me to the Comments on this Showdown with the unshakable allure and siren call of the Stratus Coupe.

I have faith that you chose wisely, my friend!

Elhigh
Elhigh
1 month ago

Jesus.

There needs to be a None button. A Thanks, I’ll Just Walk button.

The Monaco is only interesting for its origin, the Stratus is…not but is a lot more likely to keep working for a while. Neither of these looks like something I’d want to be saddled with. Both are museum pieces not for the engineering and technical prowess behind them – because there isn’t any to brag about – but as illustrations of the bedhopping that has been Chrysler Corporation.

Pass. Each of these is as appealing as being Contestant #3 in the Gang Bang of Cars.

Rockchops
Member
Rockchops
1 month ago

That Monaco is about as bland as you can get. Super clean, but entirely forgettable (and all of this goes for the Premier too).

That Stratus will last a while, we had a 2.4 eclipse for 10 years or so and was dead reliable outside of routine maintenance. Great basic cars, easy to work on and maintain, and at least a bit more interesting than the Monaco.

67 Oldsmobile
Member
67 Oldsmobile
1 month ago

I know nothing about either of these,but the Monaco seems grossly overpriced.
The Stratus is quite possibly shit as well,but it is at least priced accordingly.

TK-421
TK-421
1 month ago

Eh, the Stratus is cheaper. See if there’s a fuse for the sunroof I can pull to keep from making a mistake. (Or if there’s a simple fix for it.)

Shop-Teacher
Member
Shop-Teacher
1 month ago
Reply to  TK-421

Or just unhook the switch.

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
1 month ago

No sweetening the deal on the Monaco by mentioning the PRV engine also powers the (non-personal fusion) Delorean??

I hope we get strongly worded advocacy for the Stratus from SWG at some point. All I’ll add is how can you not love that weirdly binnacled gauge pod?

Stephen Walter Gossin
Stephen Walter Gossin
1 month ago
Reply to  Jack Trade

I made sure to clearly illustrate that the Stratus is the correct call here.

The Monaco is certainly cool as well, but not Stratus Coupe-level-of-cool.

Hope this finds you well, Jack and happy holidays!

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
1 month ago

Same to you! I watched my membership renew today and I definitely thought…LET’S WRENCH! Looking forward to a new year of rescues, maybe even another sport coupe or two. They are an endangered species at this point after all.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 month ago

I live a half hour from what was DSM…then Mitsubishi (when the not-cloud-car was made) and now Rivian.

So I’d rather have the more exotic and weird car named after a Malaise Era cop car that was named after a city state please.

Data
Data
1 month ago
Reply to  James McHenry

It’s got a cop motor, a 440-cubic-inch plant. It’s got cop tires, cop suspension, cop shocks. It’s a model made before the catalytic converter so it’ll run good on regular gas.

James McHenry
Member
James McHenry
1 month ago
Reply to  Data

“…Fix the cigarette lighter.”

StillNotATony
Member
StillNotATony
1 month ago

I don’t know why, but I have always loved the boxy Monaco/Premier.

I DO know owning it would probably be a terrible idea, but man, that thing is clean!

Jack Trade
Member
Jack Trade
1 month ago
Reply to  StillNotATony

Me too. I recall it looking a little askew even at the time, compared to everything else, which sealed the deal for me.

Huja Shaw
Member
Huja Shaw
1 month ago

How much for the Monaco?!!!! Unless it was Princess Grace’s personal car, it’s an insane price.

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