The auto industry still hasn’t learned its lesson: image sells, even when the product itself represents yesterday’s thinking. The upcoming auction of King Charles III’s former Audi A6 is being framed as a “rare” collector opportunity, but the moment says more about marketing than engineering.
The vehicle, used by the then-Prince of Wales between January 2015 and October 2016, is a diesel-powered luxury sedan with all-wheel drive and a long list of premium touches. It has covered 115,000 miles, carries a near-full service history, and features a custom green paint finish made for the Royal Household. Walnut trim, soft-close doors, heated seats, double-glazed windows, and a Bose sound system round out the package.
On paper, it’s just a well-equipped luxury car from a decade ago. In reality, it’s being positioned as something bigger because of who sat behind the wheel. That’s the industry pattern: sell the story first, the machine second.
The expected price of £20,000 to £30,000 reinforces the point. The value isn’t coming from innovation or performance. It’s coming from branding, nostalgia, and proximity to royalty. This is the same mindset that has kept automakers chasing status symbols instead of confronting tougher conversations about sustainability, safety, and long-term product responsibility.
The timing adds another layer. The sale lands as King Charles grants Scotland an additional bank holiday to mark its national football team’s return to the FIFA World Cup after a 28-year absence. The symbolism is hard to ignore: institutions celebrate milestones while the industry leans on heritage and association to maintain relevance.
Scotland’s national team will enter a difficult World Cup group against Brazil, Morocco, and Haiti, facing modern competition head-on. The auto industry, by contrast, continues to lean on legacy appeal.
This auction is a reminder of a stubborn truth. For all the talk of progress, the industry still rewards optics over substance. And until buyers demand more than a name, a story, or a badge, nothing changes.