• At least one Demon has remained on sale for more than five years.
  • Seven of them are rare Demon 170s, capped at just 3,301 worldwide.
  • Prices for the Demon 170 models range from $138,946 to $155,536.

Anyone who missed out on a Dodge Challenger SRT Demon when it was new can relax. Eight years after the car launched, the used market is still full of them, though they still change hands for more than they cost new.

One particular dealership in California has more Demons in stock than most. The dealer, Huntington Beach Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram, currently has eight standard Demon models up for sale, and no fewer than seven Demon 170s available. While they are all commanding premiums, none of them are absurdly priced.

Watch: Hennessey’s Demon 1700 Makes More Torque At The Tires Than A Bugatti Chiron Makes At The Crank

Some of these Challenger Demons have been available from the dealer since at least 2021. These include the priciest one of them all, a Blue Pearlcoat example with an asking price of $107,621. The dealership is also selling one painted Go Mango, another painted F8 Green, one that’s Pitch Black, and another that’s finished in Billet silver, all carrying an identical asking price of $107,552.

Huntington Beach Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram

The two cheapest Demons available from the dealer are both priced at $103,157: one painted Pitch Black and the other finished in Yellow Jacket. Curiously, none of the listings provides mileage details for the cars.

For your money, you get a raging 6.2-liter supercharged Hemi V8 pumping out up to 840 hp and 770 lb-ft (1,044 Nm) of torque when running on 100-octane race fuel, or 808 hp and 717 lb-ft (972 Nm) on 91-octane pump gas. The powerful muscle car originally had an MSRP of $84,995, but finding one now for less than $100,000 is extremely difficult.

Demon 170 Galore

Huntington Beach Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram

Then come the seven Demon 170s. Production ran far tighter here than on the standard car, capped at 3,301 units worldwide. The engine starts life as Dodge’s Hellcat 6.2-liter supercharged V8, but the Hellcat’s 717 hp was only a starting figure. Dodge fortified the internals with upgraded pistons, fuel injectors, crankshaft, cylinder head studs and more, before bolting a larger 3.0-liter supercharger on top.

Also: From Over $200K To $128K, The Demon 170 Fell Hard And Fast

Run it on E85 and the engine sends 1,025 hp and 945 lb-ft of torque through an eight-speed automatic to the rear wheels. Switch to the more common E10 pump gas and it still puts down 900 hp and 810 lb-ft. Dodge quoted an 8.91-second quarter mile at 151.2 mph and a 1.66-second sprint to 60 mph (97 km/h) with a rollout, quick enough to embarrass a Bugatti.

Four of the Demon 170s at this single dealership carry identical prices of $138,946, while the most expensive one wears Sublime paint and asks $155,536. At the other end sits a Plum Crazy Pearlcoat example with a $139,041 sticker.

Huntington Beach Chrysler, Dodge, Jeep, Ram