Buyer’s Guide

Buyer’s Guide — MG MGB

What to know before buying an MG MGB.


Overview

The MG MGB was produced from 1962 to 1980, making it one of the longest-running and most popular British sports cars ever, with over 500,000 built. The monocoque roadster and GT coupe featured a 1,798 cc B-series engine producing 95 bhp (reduced to 62.5 bhp on late US-spec rubber bumper cars). It remains the most accessible and affordable classic British sports car.


Model Variants

Roadster (1962–80) Open two-seater, chrome or rubber bumpers
GT (1965–80) Fixed-head coupe with hatchback, chrome or rubber bumpers
Chrome Bumper (1962–74) Lower ride height, more power, most desirable
Rubber Bumper (1974–80) Raised ride height, reduced power (US spec), large black bumpers
MGB GT V8 (1973–76) Factory Rover 3.5L V8, rare, UK market only

What to Look For — Body & Chassis

Sills The single most critical area. Inner and outer sills are structural — rusty sills compromise the car’s integrity. Check thoroughly from above, below, and inside.
Floor Pans Check from both sides. Toe boards and front floor sections are common rust areas.
Rear Wheel Arches Very common rust area. Check for filler and poor repairs.
Door Bottoms Rust at the bottom lip. Easy to see and cheap to repair.
Spring Hangers Rear spring hangers corrode — critical structural point.
Heritage Shell British Motor Heritage produced new body shells — a car on a Heritage shell is not a bad thing if the build quality is good.

What to Look For — Mechanical

Engine The 1,798 cc B-series is simple and tough. Check oil pressure (50+ psi cold, 30+ hot). Listen for bottom-end knock. Blue smoke on overrun means valve guides. Rebuilds are affordable.
Gearbox Three-synchro (early) or four-synchro (1968+). Overdrive is highly desirable — check it engages cleanly. Non-overdrive cars can be upgraded.
Brakes Front discs, rear drums. Should stop straight with good pedal feel.
Electrics Lucas electrics — check everything works. Negative earth conversion is common on early positive-earth cars.
Overdrive If fitted, test at driving speed in 3rd and 4th. Should engage cleanly with no delay.

Parts Availability

The best of any classic British sports car. Moss Motors, Rimmer Bros, British Parts Northwest, and dozens of others carry every part imaginable. You can literally build a complete MGB from new parts. Heritage body shells are available. This is the easiest classic British car to maintain and restore.


What a Good One Should Feel Like

The MGB should feel solid, predictable, and enjoyable. The engine pulls well from 2,500 rpm with a pleasant exhaust note. Steering is direct and reasonably weighted. The ride is firmer than a touring car but never harsh. With overdrive engaged the car cruises happily at motorway speeds. Chrome bumper cars feel lower and sportier; rubber bumper cars ride slightly higher but are fundamentally the same car.


Price Guide (Approximate, 2026)

Rubber Bumper Roadster — Project $5,000 – $10,000
Rubber Bumper Roadster — Good $15,000 – $22,000
Chrome Bumper Roadster — Project $10,000 – $18,000
Chrome Bumper Roadster — Good $22,000 – $35,000
Chrome Bumper Roadster — Excellent $38,000 – $55,000
GT — Typically 20–30% less than equivalent roadster
MGB GT V8 $45,000 – $80,000

Chrome bumper cars are significantly more desirable than rubber bumper models. Overdrive adds 10–15% to value. Heritage shell cars should be priced slightly below original-shell cars of equivalent condition.

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