A Triumph Stag selling at auction isn’t normally headline news.
A Triumph Stag nearly doubling its estimate certainly is.
This handsome 1974 Triumph Stag Auto crossed the block at Anglia Car Auctions in April carrying a guide price of £5,500-£6,500. By the time the auctioneer finally brought the hammer down, it had produced one of the more eye-catching results of the sale.
A Well-Presented Stag From A Deceased Estate
According to the auction catalogue, the Stag formed part of a deceased estate and had been owned by its most recent keeper since 2016.
Finished in a rich shade of red and powered by the original 3.0-litre Triumph V8, it presented well throughout and showed 74,954 miles on the odometer.
The catalogue description noted that the last MoT had been passed without advisories before expiring in 2019, with annual testing recorded up to that point. While little additional paperwork accompanied the car, it was supplied with a selection of spare bulbs and touch-up paint.
The Triumph Stag Story
The Stag has always occupied an unusual place in the classic car world.
Originally launched in 1970 as Triumph’s answer to luxury open-top grand tourers, it combined sharp Italian styling from Giovanni Michelotti with V8 power and genuine long-distance cruising ability.
For years the Stag lived in the shadow of its own reputation, with stories of overheating and reliability concerns affecting values. However, improved parts availability, better specialist knowledge and growing appreciation for seventies classics have transformed the market.
Today, good Stags attract strong interest whenever they appear at auction.
Bidding Quickly Surpassed The Estimate
Even so, few would have expected this particular example to achieve what it did.
With bidding gathering momentum, the guide price was comfortably passed and buyers continued pushing the figure upwards.
As the auction unfolded it became increasingly clear that more than one bidder was determined not to leave empty-handed.
The result was one of those entertaining auction moments where the estimate becomes irrelevant and the market takes over.
Auction Result
When the bidding finally stopped, the Triumph Stag had achieved £12,096 including buyer’s premium.
That placed it comfortably above the published estimate and demonstrated just how strong demand remains for appealing British classics.
Whether buyers were attracted by the presentation, the originality, the ownership history or simply the chance to secure a desirable Stag, the final result left little doubt that somebody really wanted this car.
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