What Is (Reportedly) the Most Expensive Dune Buggy?
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The Sidewinder by Gray Designs is frequently cited as the most expensive dune buggy. It has a quoted price around £157,000 (~US$246,000).
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Specs include: an LSX Bowtie big-block engine (~600-630 hp), advanced suspension (KING bypass shocks), custom chrome / chromoly components, a high-tech interior (OLED screens, Android-based display), etc.
A Worthy Competitor: The Laffite X-Road
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Another serious contender is the Laffite G-Tec X-Road, marketed as a “supercar off-road / luxury buggy.” One version is listed at around US$545,000 for certain trims (V8 LS3 engine or electric motor version) depending on configuration.
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If built and delivered, this would out-price the Sidewinder. That makes the “most expensive” title somewhat fluid, because it depends on final production specs, rarity, and what counts (custom build vs one-off).
What Defines “Most Expensive” and Why It Changes
There are several factors that complicate declaring a single “most expensive dune buggy”:
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Custom builds & one-offs: Many high-cost dune buggies are bespoke or limited editions. A custom build might exceed advertised prices easily.
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Features & luxury add-ons: Expensive suspension, special materials (carbon fibre, titanium, leather interiors), electronics (OLED screens, advanced telemetry), wheel/bearing/upgraded engine etc. push cost up.
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Import, taxes, shipping, specialty parts can add significantly, especially when the buggy is built overseas and shipped to the Middle East (or elsewhere).
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Electric vs combustion: Some ultra-premium buggies incorporating electric or hybrid powertrains, or unique design specs, may cost more — but may not always be consistent in performance/durability in desert conditions.
Verdict
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As of most published info, the Sidewinder holds the title of “world’s most expensive dune buggy” (~US$246,000).
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Laffite X-Road may be more expensive if its higher-end version is finalized and priced as advertised (~US$545,000 in some trims).