• This is thought to be the only Viper ACR Extreme painted in Matte Adrenaline Red.
  • The car has been driven roughly 11,000 miles and looks to be in excellent shape.
  • Bidding has already far surpassed the car’s original $150,000 MSRP.

The 2025 Chevrolet Corvette ZR1 raises the bar for America’s high-performance, track-focused supercars, promising remarkable speeds and blistering lap times. Rewind to the 2010s, and the Dodge Viper ACR hit US roads as the ultimate track-honed weapon, and a particularly nice example has hit the market. Which would you rather own?

Chevy hasn’t confirmed pricing for the new 1,064 hp Corvette ZR1, but it’s tipped to start between $150,000 and $200,000. Bidding on this Dodge at the time of writing stood at $195k, and while that’s a lot of money considering it has 424 hp less than the ‘Vette, this Viper ACR is very special.

Watch: C8 Corvette ZR1 Is The World’s Fastest Production Car Under $1M At 233 MPH

Not only was the standard ACR quite limited, but this one is known as an ‘Extreme’ and is fitted with all of the wild aero elements that Dodge’s engineers came up with at the time. These include the towering rear wing and the aggressive front splitter. Making the car all the more impressive is the fact this is thought to be the only ACR Extreme in existence painted in Matte Adrenaline Red.

This wild, in-your-face paint job suits the Viper absolutely perfectly and has been contrasted by white racing stripes and a slew of exposed carbon fiber parts. It retains the original black 19-inch multi-spoke wheels clad in Kumho Ecsta V720 tires.

 Would You Take This Dodge Viper ACR Extreme Over The New Corvette ZR1?

The cabin can’t hold a candle to the much newer Corvette ZR1, but it’s still surprisingly well-equipped and includes plenty of Alcantara, leather and carbon fiber. The Dodge is also fitted with a Harman Kardon sound system – not that anyone should be listening to music in a car fitted with an 8.4-liter naturally-aspirated V10 like this.

The Bring a Trailer auction notes the car had an original MSRP of $150,590, and while it’s now eight years old and has been driven ~11,000 miles (~17,700 km), it’s set to trade hands for much more than that. If you want to place a bid, you better do so quickly as the auction ends in two days.

Image Credit: Bring a Trailer