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Used 2015 Volkswagen CC for SaleNationwide

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84 vehicles found

Year:
2014
Make:
Volkswagen
Model:
CC
Body type:
Sedan
Doors:
4 doors
Drivetrain:
Front-Wheel Drive
Engine:
200 hp 2L I4
Exterior color:
Deep Black Pearl
Combined gas mileage:
26 MPG
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Transmission:
Automatic
Mileage:
135,960
Stock #:
755
VIN:
WVWRP7AN0EE534888
Deep Black Pearl 2014 Volkswagen CC Sedan Front-Wheel Drive Automatic

 

2014 Volkswagen CC

2.0T Executive FWD

135,960 mi

North Charleston, SC
Fair Deal

$7,725

Year:
2014
Make:
Volkswagen
Model:
CC
Body type:
Sedan
Doors:
4 doors
Drivetrain:
Front-Wheel Drive
Engine:
200 hp 2L I4
Exterior color:
Silver
Combined gas mileage:
26 MPG
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
Automatic
Mileage:
138,237
Stock #:
1042
VIN:
WVWBP7AN0EE509104
Silver 2014 Volkswagen CC Sedan Front-Wheel Drive Automatic
Price drop

-$599

 

2014 Volkswagen CC

2.0T Sport FWD

138,237 mi

Lancaster, OH
Great Deal

$6,249

$5,650

About 2015 Volkswagen CC
Due for a complete overhaul any year now, Volkswagen’s midsize executive sedan gains just a couple new wheel designs for its seventh year in production. Technically the CC is due for a redesign this year, but the company is apparently opting to test fresh tech over the pond first, leaving the future of this dignified 4-door with much room for imagination. Overseas the CC or “comfort coupe” has been a variant of the Passat, only recently adding a CC variant for the Golf, which is also gaining an all-electric powertrain just like our Golf States-side. Whether our CC will merge with the Passat or offer a 2-door variant or all-electric drivetrain are purely up to speculation at this point. Volkswagen is keeping a tight lid on the CC’s future in North America. Early in 2014 the regional company President indicated the next-generation CC could be built in the Chattanooga, Tennessee, plant, but mum has been the word ever since. The delay in releasing a next-generation CC could be chalked up to outfitting either the Chattanooga or Mexico plant for North American production, but that leaves the possibilities wide open for what may change. For now the CC is still imported from Germany, and if it were to stay that way for the next generation then we can expect changes similar to the Euro-spec Passat CC and Golf CC. For now we have essentially the same CC in 2015 as we did for 2014, excepting a couple newly optional wheel styles. That means the V6 4Motion Executive is still the only trim with all-wheel drive (AWD) and a Dynaudio sound system, the Sport is the only way to get at the optional 6-speed manual transmission, and the CC overall still doesn’t try to compete with intelligent driving technologies like blind-spot monitoring and parking assist that Ford includes in its Fusion, just as one example—but that isn’t to say the CC is any less surprising for its sticker price. Ford can have its lead in technology, and Hyundai can take the feature-loaded cake, too, with its Sonata. That’s just fine by V-Dub. When a driver is ready to give up gimmickry for true comfort in commuting, the CC will happily fill that gap with a luxuriously smooth and quiet ride, all wrapped up in a style and skin just as fitting at the opera as it is running colleagues and clients to meetings. You won’t find as much elbow room inside as in a Sonata or even a Honda Accord, and neither does its 13-cubic-foot trunk stack too highly against its competitors, but those boundaries will at least be as easy on the elbows as they are on the eyes with a soft touch and workmanship tipping a hat to bespoke makers. The same 2-liter 4-cylinder turbo still powers the Sport, R-Line and 2.0T Executive trims for 22 mpg city/31 highway with the default 6-speed shiftable automatic or 21/32 if you opt for a Sport with the manual. The 3.6-liter V6 under the hood of the 4Matic Executive is just as disappointingly inefficient as any other V6, good for 17/25 for just a half-second better time to 60 mph than the turbo’s class-leading 7.3 seconds. That V6 puts out 280 hp and 265 lb-ft/torque, compared to the turbo’s 200 hp and 207 lb-ft/torque, so the V6 should theoretically do so much better than the turbo—but this is Volkswagen we’re talking about. This company literally put diesels on the map with their turbocharger innovations in the late '70s and just recently doubled oil mileage for gas turbos. Nobody knows turbo better than the company that proudly touts “Das Turbo”—and this would be why so many drivers still beg and plead for AWD and a Dynaudio option somewhere, anywhere beyond just the V6. No such luck this year, but maybe in the next generation. Hint, hint, pretty please - with turbodiesel cherries on top, possibly?

 

Year:
2014
Make:
Volkswagen
Model:
CC
Body type:
Sedan
Doors:
4 doors
Drivetrain:
Front-Wheel Drive
Engine:
200 hp 2L I4
Exterior color:
Black
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
6-Speed Automatic
Mileage:
99,496
Stock #:
bc260455
VIN:
WVWBN7AN3EE510172
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2014 Volkswagen CC

2.0T R-Line FWD

99,496 mi

Troy, MI
Fair Deal

$8,760

Year:
2014
Make:
Volkswagen
Model:
CC
Body type:
Sedan
Doors:
4 doors
Drivetrain:
Front-Wheel Drive
Engine:
200 hp 2L I4
Combined gas mileage:
26 MPG
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Transmission:
6-Speed Dual Clutch
Mileage:
87,008
Stock #:
N4EE531364
VIN:
WVWBP7AN4EE531364
 2014 Volkswagen CC Sedan Front-Wheel Drive 6-Speed Dual Clutch
New arrival

 

2014 Volkswagen CC

2.0T Sport FWD

87,008 mi

Chantilly, VA
Good Deal

$7,772

Year:
2016
Make:
Volkswagen
Model:
CC
Body type:
Sedan
Doors:
4 doors
Drivetrain:
Front-Wheel Drive
Engine:
200 hp 2L I4
Exterior color:
Deep Black Pearl
Fuel type:
Gasoline
Interior color:
Black
Transmission:
6-Speed Automatic
Mileage:
127,384
VIN:
WVWBP7AN1GE502794
Deep Black Pearl 2016 Volkswagen CC Sedan Front-Wheel Drive 6-Speed Automatic
New arrival

 

2016 Volkswagen CC

2.0T Sport FWD

127,384 mi

Tacoma, WA
Good Deal

$6,800

Overview

Image Not Available

Due for a complete overhaul any year now, Volkswagen’s midsize executive sedan gains just a couple new wheel designs for its seventh year in production. Technically the CC is due for a redesign this year, but the company is apparently opting to test fresh tech over the pond first, leaving the future of this dignified 4-door with much room for imagination.

Overseas the CC or “comfort coupe” has been a variant of the Passat, only recently adding a CC variant for the Golf, which is also gaining an all-electric powertrain just like our Golf States-side. Whether our CC will merge with the Passat or offer a 2-door variant or all-electric drivetrain are purely up to speculation at this point. Volkswagen is keeping a tight lid on the CC’s future in North America.

Early in 2014 the regional company President indicated the next-generation CC could be built in the Chattanooga, Tennessee, plant, but mum has been the word ever since. The delay in releasing a next-generation CC could be chalked up to outfitting either the Chattanooga or Mexico plant for North American production, but that leaves the possibilities wide open for what may change. For now the CC is still imported from Germany, and if it were to stay that way for the next generation then we can expect changes similar to the Euro-spec Passat CC and Golf CC.

For now we have essentially the same CC in 2015 as we did for 2014, excepting a couple newly optional wheel styles. That means the V6 4Motion Executive is still the only trim with all-wheel drive (AWD) and a Dynaudio sound system, the Sport is the only way to get at the optional 6-speed manual transmission, and the CC overall still doesn’t try to compete with intelligent driving technologies like blind-spot monitoring and parking assist that Ford includes in its Fusion, just as one example—but that isn’t to say the CC is any less surprising for its sticker price.

Ford can have its lead in technology, and Hyundai can take the feature-loaded cake, too, with its Sonata. That’s just fine by V-Dub. When a driver is ready to give up gimmickry for true comfort in commuting, the CC will happily fill that gap with a luxuriously smooth and quiet ride, all wrapped up in a style and skin just as fitting at the opera as it is running colleagues and clients to meetings. You won’t find as much elbow room inside as in a Sonata or even a Honda Accord, and neither does its 13-cubic-foot trunk stack too highly against its competitors, but those boundaries will at least be as easy on the elbows as they are on the eyes with a soft touch and workmanship tipping a hat to bespoke makers.

The same 2-liter 4-cylinder turbo still powers the Sport, R-Line and 2.0T Executive trims for 22 mpg city/31 highway with the default 6-speed shiftable automatic or 21/32 if you opt for a Sport with the manual. The 3.6-liter V6 under the hood of the 4Matic Executive is just as disappointingly inefficient as any other V6, good for 17/25 for just a half-second better time to 60 mph than the turbo’s class-leading 7.3 seconds.

That V6 puts out 280 hp and 265 lb-ft/torque, compared to the turbo’s 200 hp and 207 lb-ft/torque, so the V6 should theoretically do so much better than the turbo—but this is Volkswagen we’re talking about. This company literally put diesels on the map with their turbocharger innovations in the late '70s and just recently doubled oil mileage for gas turbos. Nobody knows turbo better than the company that proudly touts “Das Turbo”—and this would be why so many drivers still beg and plead for AWD and a Dynaudio option somewhere, anywhere beyond just the V6.

No such luck this year, but maybe in the next generation. Hint, hint, pretty please - with turbodiesel cherries on top, possibly?

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