
After ordering a G63 from a 4S store, it usually takes within a month to pick up the car. Here are the precautions when picking up the car: 1. Check all the vehicle documents: including the purchase invoice, certificate of conformity, vehicle consistency certificate, vehicle registration certificate, warranty certificate, vehicle manual, and new car delivery confirmation form. If the 4S store is responsible for license plate registration and insurance, you will also need to obtain the original insurance policy, insurance invoice, compulsory traffic insurance invoice, vehicle and vessel tax invoice, purchase tax invoice, tax payment certificate, and compulsory traffic insurance label from the salesperson. 2. Inspect the vehicle: Externally, check the paint, production date of the window glass, tires, trunk, and engine. For the interior, focus on checking the car's functions, such as lights, windows, rearview mirrors, dashboard, air conditioning, etc.

A friend recently ordered a G63, and from what I know, the delivery time for this car is seriously long. I’ve summarized three key factors affecting this: First, the current W463 chassis G63 is extremely popular—a performance beast and a must-have for the wealthy, keeping production tight year-round. Waiting six months for a standard order is considered fast. Second, your chosen configuration matters a lot. Opting for a Brabus kit or special paint adds at least two more months. Third, 4S dealership allocations follow a first-come, first-served rule. Flagship stores in hot cities might secure a car in three months, while smaller city dealers could take up to eight. My advice: visit multiple dealerships to compare allocation status before ordering. Sometimes, adding an AMG driving package might even get you into that month’s production line.

From my decade-long experience with Mercedes, the delivery time for a G63 is like opening a mystery box. Earlier this year, I helped a fellow car enthusiast track one down, and here's some insider knowledge: the manufacturer releases quotas to dealers on the 26th of each month, and at this point, it all comes down to the salesperson's connections. If you're lucky enough to catch a new production cycle, getting a base model in three months isn't a myth. But if you opt for designo red interiors or carbon fiber exterior components, the German factory alone can take up to 45 days just waiting for these optional parts. Nowadays, the smart queuing system is quite popular—after placing your deposit, make sure your salesperson checks the estimated production date (VPC) in the system weekly; it's much more reliable than just waiting around.

Last week, I accompanied my buddy to the Mercedes-Benz dealership to place an order for a G63. The sales director immediately pulled up their inventory system to show us: the earliest delivery for a standard version without optional packages would take at least five months. The delays mainly stem from three factors—each AMG engine requires manual assembly (one technician takes two days to assemble a single unit), the factory prioritizes production for the G63 Edition models (these limited editions consume 30% of the total capacity), and shipping takes an additional month due to customs clearance delays at Tianjin Port. A pleasant surprise was spotting a Moonstone Magno matte grey display model in the showroom—it became available because the original buyer’s loan fell through. We paid an extra 80,000 RMB and drove it home on the spot.


