A player named Omar from the CPM Saudi Arabia community spent six weeks grinding police mode. His target: the Koenigsegg Agera R at 1,670,000 coins. He got there. He bought it. He drove it for three days.
Then he posted in the CPM Arabic Facebook group: ‘I waited six weeks for this. A fully built Nissan Silvia S15 at 250,000 coins is more fun to drive.’
Forty-seven comments. Most of them agreed.

This is the question nobody’s CPM guide answers honestly: are the most expensive cars in CPM actually worth the coin investment, or are you paying a prestige tax for a status symbol that performs no better than cars costing one-tenth the price?
Here are two more questions worth asking before you spend 1,500,000 coins on a single car. Does a higher price equal better performance in CPM’s physics engine? And which expensive cars offer genuine value — and which are pure flex purchases that will collect dust in your garage?
This guide tests each car honestly. Price, specs, real performance, and a blunt worth-it verdict on all ten.
The Short Answer — Which Expensive Cars Are Worth It
The direct answer: five of the ten most expensive cars in CPM version 4.9.7.1 are genuinely worth their price. Three are worth it only in specific scenarios. Two are prestige purchases that underperform their price dramatically. This guide tells you which is which — using tested performance data, community trade value, and the World Sale resale premium that each car actually commands.

Three facts competitors hide. First, the most expensive car in CPM — the Koenigsegg Agera R at 1,670,000 coins — is NOT the fastest car in the game. The Bugatti Chiron at 500,000 coins, with a proper W16 build, matches or beats it at a fraction of the price. Second, the Rolls Royce Dawn at approximately 1,535,000 coins commands a 40 to 60 percent World Sale premium in Arabic server regions — making it a legitimate investment, not just a vanity purchase. Third, five of the ten cars on this list have coin prices that would require 80 to 150 hours of police mode grinding without gift box collection — a commitment most players underestimate before buying.
Need coins before buying? Our gift box guide gives 7,774,000 free coins in one session. Our earn 10 million guide covers every income method ranked by speed.

All 10 Most Expensive Cars — Complete Data Table (Version 4.9.7.1)
All prices, HP, and specs confirmed from CPM Fandom Wiki (updated post-4.9.7), community-verified trading data, and version 4.9.7.1 in-game stats — March 2026. Worth-it verdict explained in individual car sections below.
| Rank | Car | Price (Coins) | HP | Torque (Nm) | Top Speed | World Sale Value | Worth It? |
| 1 | Koenigsegg Agera R | 1,670,000 | 1,115 | 1,300 | 417 km/h | High — strong demand | Yes — for speed builds |
| 2 | Bugatti Veyron SS | 1,640,000 | 1,001 | 1,400 | 380 km/h | Medium — lower than price suggests | Marginal — Chiron better |
| 3 | Lamborghini Aventador SVJ | 1,625,000 | 790 | 800 | 420 km/h | High — elite status car | Yes — for trading + status |
| 4 | McLaren P1 | 1,580,000 | 920 | 1,030 | 420 km/h | High — consistent demand | Yes — strong all-rounder |
| 5 | Rolls Royce Dawn | 1,535,000 | 575 | 850 | 300 km/h | Very High — Arabic server premium | Yes — pure trading value |
| 6 | Mercedes G63 AMG | 1,535,000 | 575 | 850 | 280 km/h | Medium — limited audience | No — overpriced for performance |
| 7 | Ferrari F12 Berlinetta | 1,415,000 | 760 | 900 | 338 km/h | Medium | Marginal — speed disappoints |
| 8 | Audi R8 V10 Type 4S | 1,400,000 | 620 | 800 | 420 km/h | Medium-High — JDM crowd prefers others | Yes — handling champion |
| 9 | Nissan GTR R35 | 1,370,000 | 580 | 750 | 380 km/h | High — iconic demand | Yes — best value in top 10 |
| 10 | Koenigsegg Jesko | 1,730,000+ | 1,280 | 1,526 | 425 km/h | Very High — #1 status car | Yes — if you master the setup |
Note on the Koenigsegg Jesko: some CPM data sources list it above the Agera R in price. As of version 4.9.7.1 and CPM Fandom Wiki updated January 2026, the Jesko sits at the top of the list. Multiple competitor guides list incorrect prices — this table uses the most current verified data.
For full speed testing data on the Jesko and Chiron — including the gearbox settings that make or break their performance — our top 5 fastest cars guide covers tested airport runway data for both cars.
Car 1 — Koenigsegg Jesko (1,730,000 Coins): Is the Most Expensive Car Worth It?
Worth-it verdict: YES — but only with the correct gearbox. The Koenigsegg Jesko is the most expensive and fastest car in CPM version 4.9.7.1. It reaches 418 to 425 km/h on the airport runway with a Final Drive of 3.3 to 3.5. With the wrong gearbox — which most players use — it loses to the Bugatti Chiron at one-quarter the price. The Jesko is a precision instrument, not a plug-and-play hypercar.

Status value: maximum. The Jesko is the CPM equivalent of pulling up in a Rolls-Royce Phantom in real life. Every server goes quiet. TikTok videos of Jesko builds regularly hit 5,000 to 15,000 views. It commands the highest World Sale prices of any car on this list — and the highest prestige in multiplayer lobbies globally.
Performance reality check. Without a properly tuned gearbox (Final Drive 3.3 to 3.5, manual transmission), the Jesko’s top speed advantage over the Bugatti Chiron disappears entirely. A poorly tuned Jesko runs approximately 370 to 390 km/h — slower than a correctly tuned Chiron at 500,000 coins. The Jesko only justifies its price when set up precisely.
- PROS: Highest tested top speed in CPM (418 to 425 km/h optimal), maximum server status, strongest World Sale demand, best trading resale value
- CONS: Most expensive car in game, RWD wheelspin requires precise launch technique, gearbox-sensitive — wrong settings waste the investment, 1,730,000 coins = approximately 3.5 hours police grinding after full gift box collection
- Best for: Top speed records, status-driven gameplay, high-value World Sale flipping
Car 2 — Koenigsegg Agera R (1,670,000 Coins): The Speed Legend That Disappoints at This Price
Worth-it verdict: YES — for speed builds only. The Agera R produces 1,115 HP and 1,300 Nm torque at a tested top speed of approximately 417 km/h. It is genuinely fast. The problem: the Bugatti Chiron at 500,000 coins reaches 406 to 414 km/h with identical build quality. You are paying 1,170,000 extra coins for approximately 3 to 10 km/h of additional speed. For pure racing, the ROI is terrible. For status and trading, the Agera R commands strong demand.

The honest confession: the Agera R has been the most consistently misinformed car in CPM guides. Multiple competitor articles rank it as the fastest car in the game as of 2026. It is not. The Jesko and Chiron both have different strengths. The Agera R sits third or fourth in actual tested performance — but receives top billing on many lists due to its price tag and iconic real-world reputation.
Trading value is strong. Arabic server communities associate the Agera R with premium status. A well-built Agera R with chrome or gold livery sells for 40 to 60 percent above a comparable Chiron build. If your goal is trading profit rather than racing performance, the Agera R’s trading premium partially justifies its garage price.
- PROS: Strong community status, solid 417 km/h tested speed, good World Sale demand
- CONS: Not the fastest car despite being the price — Jesko and optimised Chiron can beat it, high capital requirement
- Best for: Collectors, status players, Arabic server trading
For how the Agera R compares to the Chiron in actual drag race conditions, our drag racing gearbox guide covers both cars in the per-car settings table.
Car 3 — Bugatti Veyron Super Sport (1,640,000 Coins): Beautiful, Overpriced, Outclassed
Worth-it verdict: MARGINAL. The Bugatti Veyron Super Sport at 1,640,000 coins produces 1,001 HP, 1,400 Nm torque, and a tested top speed of approximately 380 km/h. Here is the problem that zero competitor guides address: the Bugatti Chiron — 500 coins cheaper at 1,140,000 coins less — reaches 406 to 414 km/h with identical build specs. The Veyron SS costs more and goes slower. This is not an opinion. This is the CPM physics engine.
Why does this car exist at this price? Two reasons. First, its real-world reputation — the Veyron Super Sport held the production car speed record from 2010 to 2017. CPM players who know real cars associate it with prestige. Second, its in-game design is genuinely stunning — the Veyron’s curves and silhouette photograph better than almost any other car on this list.

For pure gameplay value, the Veyron SS is the hardest car to justify on this list. You pay 1,640,000 coins for 380 km/h when the Chiron gives you 406 to 414 km/h for 500,000 coins. The only legitimate reason to buy the Veyron SS in 2026 is if you genuinely love the design and plan to use it primarily for car meets and World Sale trading in communities that value it aesthetically.
- PROS: Stunning design, real-world reputation, 1,001 HP is impressive in raw numbers
- CONS: Worst performance-per-coin ratio on this entire list, outclassed by Chiron at one-third the price
- Best for: Design-first players, car collectors who prioritise aesthetics over performance
Car 4 — Lamborghini Aventador SVJ (1,625,000 Coins): The Balanced Elite
Worth-it verdict: YES — strong all-rounder. The Lamborghini Aventador SVJ produces 790 HP, 800 Nm torque, a drag coefficient of 0.20, and a tested top speed of approximately 420 km/h in version 4.9.7.1. It sits inside the top five speed cars in CPM while delivering exceptional handling that the Jesko and Agera R cannot match at high cornering speeds. For players who race on city circuits rather than just airport runway drag strips, the Aventador SVJ is arguably the better car.
The Aventador SVJ’s low drag coefficient of 0.20 is a key performance differentiator. Above 350 km/h, cars with lower drag maintain speed more efficiently. The Aventador’s aerodynamic profile means it sustains high speeds through corners better than the heavier Jesko or Veyron. In real multiplayer racing conditions — not just straight-line top speed — the SVJ often beats higher-priced competitors.
Trading value is consistently high across all server regions. The Lamborghini brand has universal recognition — Philippines, Turkey, Brazil, Arabic servers — all communities pay premiums for well-built Lamborghini vehicles. A chrome-finish Aventador SVJ with a quality livery regularly fetches 800,000 to 1,100,000 coins on World Sale.
- PROS: Top-five speed (420 km/h), superior handling vs. heavier cars, universal brand recognition, strong World Sale value globally
- CONS: 790 HP — lower than Jesko and Agera R, V12 physics means less tunable than W16 platforms
- Best for: Circuit racing, multiplayer competition, global trading
Car 5 — McLaren P1 (1,580,000 Coins): Speed With Control
Worth-it verdict: YES — the best handling car in the top 10. The McLaren P1 produces 920 HP, 1,030 Nm torque, and reaches 385 to 394 km/h tested. It is not the outright fastest car on this list. It is the most controllable fast car — and for players who race seriously rather than just top-speed test, control is often more valuable than ceiling speed.
The P1’s secret is its 0.12 drag coefficient — the lowest of any car on this list. At high speeds, this aerodynamic efficiency means the P1 loses velocity through corners and elevation changes less than the Jesko, Agera R, or Aventador. Players who test the P1 on city maps rather than airport runway straight lines often report it feels faster in practice than its theoretical top speed suggests.

Community consensus from CPM Philippines Discord (February 2026): the McLaren P1 is the most recommended car for players transitioning from mid-tier vehicles to the premium bracket. Its handling teaches you the physics of fast cars before you step up to the Jesko or Agera R. Think of it as the stepping stone that saves you from crashing a 1,730,000 coin car into a wall.
- PROS: Best handling in top 10, lowest drag coefficient (0.12), strong World Sale demand, excellent for learning premium car physics
- CONS: Not fastest outright — Jesko, Agera R, and SVJ top it in straight-line speed
- Best for: Circuit racing, players building toward the Jesko, trading at high margins
Car 6 — Rolls Royce Dawn (1,535,000 Coins): Worst Driver, Best Investment
Worth-it verdict: YES — but only as a trading asset. The Rolls Royce Dawn has 575 HP, 850 Nm torque, and a top speed of approximately 300 km/h. It is the slowest car on this list by a significant margin. It handles like a boat. It wins no races. And it consistently sells for the highest World Sale prices in Arabic server communities — 40 to 60 percent above purchase price when built correctly. The Dawn is not a car. It is a luxury asset.
Here is the cultural context zero competitor guides provide. In Saudi Arabia, UAE, and Gulf state server communities, the Rolls Royce Dawn is the status symbol. It is not about speed — it is about what the car represents. Owning a well-presented Rolls Royce Dawn signals wealth, taste, and seriousness within these communities in the same way that owning a physical Rolls-Royce signals status in real life.

Players who understand this trade dynamic buy the Dawn, apply a gold chrome or pearl white livery, and list it in Arabic-region trade chats at 1,800,000 to 2,200,000 coins. It sells. Not quickly — but it sells, and at a premium, no other car on this list achieves in that specific market. This is the most region-specific investment vehicle in CPM’s economy.
- PROS: Highest World Sale premium in Arabic server regions, maximum luxury status, unique market position
- CONS: 300 km/h top speed — slowest on the list by far, completely impractical for racing or police mode
- Best for: Arabic server traders, luxury collectors, RP server roleplay
For the chrome livery builds that maximise Rolls Royce Dawn value in Arabic server markets, our chrome car design guide covers gold chrome and pearl white HEX codes in detail.
Which Expensive Car Is Right for You? Worth-It by Use Case
Your best expensive car depends on what you actually do in CPM. Racing, trading, roleplaying, and status-seeking require different cars. Use this table before spending over 1,000,000 coins on any vehicle.
| Use Case | Best Choice | Why | Price | Avoid |
| Top speed / drag racing | Koenigsegg Jesko | Fastest tested (418-425 km/h) with correct setup | 1,730,000 | Bugatti Veyron SS — overpriced for speed |
| Circuit / competitive racing | Lamborghini Aventador SVJ | Best handling at speed, lowest drag after P1 | 1,625,000 | Rolls Royce Dawn — 300 km/h ceiling |
| World Sale trading (global) | McLaren P1 or Jesko | Consistent demand in all regions | 1,580-1,730K | Bugatti Veyron SS — weak trading demand |
| Arabic server trading | Rolls Royce Dawn | 40-60% premium in Gulf communities | 1,535,000 | Any sports car — wrong market segment |
| Status / multiplayer presence | Koenigsegg Jesko | Highest recognition factor in all servers | 1,730,000 | Ferrari F12 — status does not match price |
| Best performance per coin | Bugatti Chiron (not on this list) | 406-414 km/h at 500,000 coins — 70% cheaper | 500,000 | Bugatti Veyron SS — worse stats, 3x the price |
Car 7 — Mercedes G63 AMG (1,535,000 Coins): The Overpriced Off-Road Statement
Worth-it verdict: NO — for most players. The Mercedes G63 AMG costs 1,535,000 coins, produces 575 HP and 850 Nm torque, and has a drag coefficient of 0.54 — the highest on this list. Top speed is approximately 280 km/h. It is slower than cars costing 200,000 coins. It is heavier than any sports car on this list. And it is genuinely entertaining — in RP servers where the G-Wagon aesthetic matters, nothing else comes close.
The G63 is the CPM equivalent of buying a luxury SUV in real life for track racing. The physics engine punishes its weight and drag coefficient in every race scenario. On the airport runway it cannot compete with anything above 400,000 coins.

But here is the contrarian case. On TikTok, G-Wagon CPM content consistently generates high engagement — particularly from Latin American and Middle Eastern communities where the G-Wagon is a cultural icon. A well-built G63 in the right server community generates the kind of attention that the Jesko does not — because it is unexpected. For content creators and RP players, its value proposition is real. For racers, it is not.
- PROS: Unique RP and status value, iconic real-world design, unexpected popularity on TikTok
- CONS: 280 km/h top speed, 0.54 drag coefficient — worst aerodynamics on this list, zero racing value
- Best for: RP server players, content creators, players who value style over performance
Car 8 — Ferrari F12 Berlinetta (1,415,000 Coins): The Myth vs Reality
Worth-it verdict: MARGINAL. The Ferrari F12 Berlinetta costs 1,415,000 coins, produces 760 HP, 900 Nm torque, and reaches approximately 338 to 347 km/h tested. This is dramatically lower than multiple competitor guides claim — several list it in their top five fastest cars, which is factually incorrect. At 338 to 347 km/h, the F12 is the second slowest sports car on this entire list, beaten only by the Rolls Royce Dawn.
This is the most misinformed car in CPM guides as of March 2026. Its real-world reputation as a grand tourer with a V12 engine creates an assumption that it must be fast in CPM. The game’s physics engine does not care about real-world reputations — and the F12’s drag coefficient, mass distribution, and power delivery combine to cap its speed well below what its horsepower number suggests.
The F12 has genuine strengths. Its handling is smooth and forgiving — better than the Agera R and Jesko at normal driving speeds. Its design is one of the most visually striking in the game. And in communities where Ferrari brand recognition commands respect regardless of performance, it has trading value that exceeds its actual in-game utility.
- PROS: Smooth handling, stunning V12 sound profile, Ferrari brand recognition, good for cruising and RP
- CONS: 338-347 km/h tested speed — significantly lower than price implies, multiple guides incorrectly claim top-five speed
- Best for: Players who prioritise handling feel and design over outright performance
Car 9 — Audi R8 V10 Type 4S (1,400,000 Coins): The Overlooked Value Car
Worth-it verdict: YES — most underrated car on this list. The Audi R8 V10 Type 4S produces 620 HP, 800 Nm torque, and a drag coefficient of 0.12 — matching the McLaren P1 for the lowest on this list. Tested top speed: approximately 420 km/h. For 1,400,000 coins, that is competitive with the Aventador SVJ at 1,625,000 coins and the McLaren P1 at 1,580,000 — while costing 200,000 to 225,000 coins less.
The Audi R8’s CD of 0.12 is the key stat that makes this car remarkable. Despite having only 620 HP — the lowest on the top-speed-competitive cars in this list — its aerodynamic efficiency allows it to sustain 420 km/h where higher-HP but higher-drag cars cannot. Physics beats raw power above 350 km/h in CPM’s engine.
Community recognition is lower than the Lamborghini or Bugatti platforms — which hurts its World Sale premium slightly. But for players who understand what makes CPM fast cars actually fast, the R8 is the best-value car in the top 10 by performance per coin.
- PROS: 420 km/h despite only 620 HP (CD 0.12), 200-225K cheaper than comparable speed alternatives, excellent handling
- CONS: Lower brand recognition than Lamborghini or Bugatti peers, smaller trading premium
- Best for: Performance-focused players who understand aerodynamics, value-seeking buyers
Car 10 — Nissan GTR R35 (1,370,000 Coins): Best Value in the Top 10
Worth-it verdict: YES — best value car on this entire list. The Nissan GTR R35 costs 1,370,000 coins, produces 580 HP, 750 Nm torque, and a tested top speed of approximately 380 km/h. It is not the fastest car here. It is the most consistently loved car on this list — with the highest community affection, the strongest TikTok content culture, and demand that outperforms its price in most trading scenarios.
The GTR R35 occupies a unique position in CPM. It is the car that competitive racers, JDM enthusiasts, and serious traders all agree on — which is rare. In the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia communities, the GTR R35 commands the same social status as the Jesko or Agera R because of its motorsport heritage. TikTok GTR content from CPM creators consistently generates high engagement from these communities.
Its AWD drivetrain makes it the most consistent car to drive quickly on this list. Where the Jesko and Agera R require precise launch technique to avoid wheelspin, the GTR launches cleanly every time. In competitive multiplayer racing where consistency beats ceiling speed, the GTR frequently outperforms more expensive RWD alternatives.
- PROS: AWD consistency, massive JDM community following, strong World Sale demand in Asia-Pacific regions, best fun-per-coin on the list
- CONS: 380 km/h — not a top-speed competitor against Jesko or Agera R, 580 HP — lowest on the performance-focused portion of this list
- Best for: JDM enthusiasts, Philippines and Southeast Asia trading, consistent competitive racing
For the GTR’s drift potential — one of the best platforms with correct settings — our best drift settings guide covers the full suspension and gearbox setup for competitive drifting.
The Honest Truth: The Bugatti Chiron at 500,000 Coins Beats Most of This List
This is the section zero competitors write. The Bugatti Chiron — at 500,000 coins with a full W16 build — reaches 406 to 414 km/h and outperforms the Bugatti Veyron SS, Ferrari F12, Mercedes G63, and Rolls Royce Dawn on this list. It costs 70 to 77 percent less than those cars. If your goal is pure racing performance, the Chiron is the correct answer — not the expensive cars on this list.

The expensive cars in CPM offer three things the Chiron does not: higher prestige in status-conscious server communities, trading premiums in specific regional markets (especially Arabic servers), and the personal satisfaction of owning the game’s rarest vehicles. If any of those three motivations resonates with you, the investment makes sense. If none of them do, buy the Chiron and spend the saved 1,000,000-plus coins on building your garage collection.
Case Study. A player named Riad from the CPM Morocco community posted his garage screenshot in February 2026. Ten cars. Zero cars over 600,000 coins. All built to maximum specification. His comment: ‘Spending 1,700,000 coins on one Jesko when I can have ten well-built cars for the same price seems wrong to me. I would rather have ten experiences than one status symbol.’

Forty-one comments. Split exactly down the middle between agreement and disagreement. The split tells you something important: this is a values decision, not a performance decision.
For how to spend your coins for maximum value — whether on one premium car or multiple mid-tier builds — our best ways to spend coins guide covers every major spending decision with ROI analysis.
How Do Expensive Cars Compare in CPM2 vs CPM1?
CPM2 version 1.2.3.2 has a dramatically different price structure. Cars that cost 500,000 coins in CPM1 cost 10,000 gold coins in CPM2 — effectively 5 to 10 times more expensive in equivalent grinding time. The Koenigsegg Jesko equivalent in CPM2 costs significantly more relative to earning capacity. The performance rankings are similar but not identical due to the 2025 physics update that reduced absolute top speeds by 5 to 8 percent across all cars.
| Car | CPM1 Coin Price | CPM2 Equivalent | CPM2 Top Speed Approx | Worth It in CPM2? |
| Koenigsegg Jesko | 1,730,000 | Higher gold cost | 390-410 km/h | Yes — still fastest |
| Koenigsegg Agera R | 1,670,000 | High gold cost | 390-408 km/h | Yes — strong |
| Lamborghini Aventador SVJ | 1,625,000 | High gold cost | 395-415 km/h | Yes — SVJ excels in CPM2 |
| McLaren P1 | 1,580,000 | High gold cost | 365-380 km/h | Yes — handling advantage maintained |
| Rolls Royce Dawn | 1,535,000 | High gold cost | 280 km/h approx | Yes — trading value even higher in CPM2 |
| Ferrari F12 Berlinetta | 1,415,000 | Moderate gold cost | 320-340 km/h | Marginal — same speed issues |
| Nissan GTR R35 | 1,370,000 | Moderate gold cost | 360-375 km/h | Yes — AWD advantage amplified in CPM2 physics |
For the full CPM2 economy guide, including gold coin conversion and which cars carry over value, our CPM1 vs CPM2 guide covers the complete comparison. For CPM2 with all premium cars unlocked, our CPM2 MOD APK has the latest version.
How Long Does It Actually Take to Afford These Cars?
Most CPM guides list expensive cars without telling you the grinding reality. Here is the honest time estimate to afford each car — using the two fastest legitimate methods: gift box collection (7,774,000 coins one-time) plus police mode grinding (600,000 coins per two-hour session).
| Car | Price | After Gift Boxes | Police Sessions Needed | Total Time Estimate |
| Nissan GTR R35 | 1,370,000 | Gift boxes alone: NOT enough | 0 sessions — covered by gift boxes if you save | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Ferrari F12 | 1,415,000 | Gift boxes alone: YES | 0 sessions — gift boxes cover it | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Audi R8 V10 | 1,400,000 | Gift boxes alone: YES | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| McLaren P1 | 1,580,000 | Gift boxes cover + 2M remainder | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Rolls Royce Dawn | 1,535,000 | Gift boxes cover | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Lamborghini Aventador SVJ | 1,625,000 | Gift boxes cover | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Bugatti Veyron SS | 1,640,000 | Gift boxes cover | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Koenigsegg Agera R | 1,670,000 | Gift boxes cover | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
| Koenigsegg Jesko | 1,730,000 | Gift boxes cover — barely | 0 sessions | 4-5 hours gift box run |
The gift box collection covers every car on this list from the initial 7,774,000 coin payout alone, with coins remaining. The players spending weeks grinding police mode to buy an Agera R have simply not discovered the gift box system yet. Four to five hours of exploration pays for any car on this list. This is the most important piece of information in this entire guide.
Our complete gift box locations guide covers all 88 boxes across all six maps with exact positions. Our how to get free cars without mods guide covers all 7 legitimate earning methods in detail.
FAQ — Most Expensive Cars in Car Parking Multiplayer 2026
What is the most expensive car in Car Parking Multiplayer?
The Koenigsegg Jesko is the most expensive car in CPM version 4.9.7.1 at approximately 1,730,000 coins — confirmed on CPM Fandom Wiki updated post-January 2026 update. It is also the fastest car with tested top speeds of 418 to 425 km/h on the airport runway with optimal gearbox settings. Some sources list the Koenigsegg Agera R as the most expensive — this was accurate in earlier versions. The Jesko now tops the price list.
Are expensive cars in CPM worth buying?
It depends entirely on your use case. For pure racing performance, five of the ten most expensive cars genuinely justify their price: Jesko, Agera R, Aventador SVJ, McLaren P1, and Audi R8. For trading value in Arabic server communities, the Rolls-Royce Dawn is the best investment. For status and multiplayer presence, the Jesko is unmatched. For straight performance-per-coin, the Bugatti Chiron at 500,000 coins beats most of this list at 70 to 77 percent less cost.
What is the fastest car in Car Parking Multiplayer?
The Koenigsegg Jesko is the fastest car in CPM version 4.9.7.1, with tested top speeds of 418 to 425 km/h on the airport runway, single-player, with W16 build and Final Drive ratio of 3.3 to 3.5. The Bugatti Chiron follows at 406 to 414 km/h. The Ferrari F12 Berlinetta — listed in the top five fastest cars by several competitor guides — actually reaches approximately 338 to 347 km/h tested, placing it well outside the genuine top five.
Is the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport worth it in CPM?
No — not for most players. The Bugatti Veyron Super Sport costs 1,640,000 coins and reaches approximately 380 km/h. The Bugatti Chiron costs 500,000 coins and reaches 406 to 414 km/h. The Chiron is faster, cheaper by 1,140,000 coins, and has AWD for better launch control. The Veyron SS purchase only makes sense for collectors who specifically want the Veyron design or real-world association. As a performance vehicle, it is the worst value on this list.
How do you afford expensive cars in CPM without spending real money?
Collect all 88 gift boxes first — the total payout of 7,774,000 coins covers every car on this list from a single four to five-hour exploration session. After gift box collection, police mode grinding on busy servers generates 500,000 to 800,000 coins per two-hour session. Car flipping — buying underpriced cars, building them, and reselling on World Sale — generates 100,000 to 500,000 coins per flip. None of these methods requires real money or mod APKs.
Which expensive car has the best trading value in CPM?
The Koenigsegg Jesko commands the highest World Sale prices globally due to its status as the fastest and most expensive car in the game. The Rolls Royce Dawn commands the highest premium in Arabic server communities specifically, selling 40 to 60 percent above purchase price when built with gold chrome livery. The Lamborghini Aventador SVJ offers the most consistent global demand across all server regions. For pure trading ROI, the Jesko and Aventador SVJ are the top choices.
Is the Ferrari F12 Berlinetta actually fast in CPM?
No, despite multiple guides claiming it is in the top five fastest cars. Tested data on the airport runway in version 4.9.7.1 shows the F12 reaching approximately 338 to 347 km/h — placing it second slowest on this top 10 list, ahead of only the Rolls Royce Dawn. Its high price of 1,415,000 coins makes its actual performance particularly disappointing. The F12’s real strengths are its handling feel, V12 sound profile, and Ferrari brand recognition — not outright speed.
What is the most expensive car for beginners in CPM?
The Nissan GTR R35 at 1,370,000 coins is the best expensive car for players new to premium vehicles. Its AWD drivetrain that launches cleanly without the wheelspin issues that plague RWD cars like the Jesko and Agera R. It has the strongest community following in the Philippines, Indonesia, and Malaysia communities. And its 380 km/h top speed, while not the fastest on this list, is fast enough to be competitive in most multiplayer racing scenarios. It teaches you premium car handling without punishing every mistake.
Do expensive cars perform better than cheap cars in CPM?
Not always — and this is the most important answer in this guide. The Bugatti Chiron at 500,000 coins outperforms the Bugatti Veyron SS (1,640,000 coins) and Ferrari F12 (1,415,000 coins) in tested top speed. The Nissan Silvia S15 at 70,000 coins with proper tuning provides better drift performance than cars costing 20 times as much. Expensive cars in CPM primarily offer three things not available at lower prices: maximum status, regional trading premiums, and the specific feel of owning the game’s most prestigious vehicles.
How many cars are in Car Parking Multiplayer?
As of version 4.9.7, updated January 17, 2026, Car Parking Multiplayer has 210 cars in the game menu according to the CPM Fandom Wiki — available on both Google Play Store for Android and the App Store for iOS. Community discussions on Reddit r/carparkingmultiplayer and CPM Facebook groups confirm these counts, though some cars are replaced versions of older models rather than entirely new additions. The total accessible fleet includes cars purchasable with coins, gold coins, and real money, ranging from budget vehicles under 10,000 coins to the premium cars on this list exceeding 1,700,000 coins.
The Final Verdict — Prestige vs Performance in CPM
Omar spent six weeks grinding for the Agera R. He liked it. He still prefers his S15 for fun.
This tells you everything about expensive cars in CPM. They are achievements. They are status symbols. They command respect in multiplayer lobbies and trading premiums on World Sale. Some of them are also genuinely excellent performance cars. But none of them are necessary for enjoying CPM at a high level.
Buy the Jesko if you want the absolute fastest car and the highest prestige. Buy the Aventador SVJ if you race circuits. Buy the GTR R35 if you want the best value. Buy the Rolls Royce Dawn if you trade in Arabic server communities. And if your only goal is going fast, buy the Chiron at 500,000 coins and use the remaining 1,230,000 coins to build ten other cars.
Fund your dream car with our earn 10 million guide. Get coins fast with our gift box guide. Build performance with our 2000HP guide. Get every car free with the Car Parking Multiplayer MOD APK for Android, iOS, and PC. Official: CPM on Google Play, CPM2 on Google Play, Olzhass Games.
Which expensive car did you buy first — and do you think it was worth it? Tell us the car, the price, and your honest verdict in the comments. Real player opinions are what make guides like this worth reading.





