The ANWB Koerslijst uses a formula. We show you what your car is really worth.
The ANWB Koerslijst calculates a car's daily value using a depreciation formula. Based on the list price, the year and the mileage, it produces a theoretical figure. Insurers and dealers use it as a reference, but the result is not a market price.
We work differently. Instead of a formula, we show what buyers are currently asking for the same car. That is the real market value, and it often differs from what the koerslijst says.
ANWB Koerslijst vs. Keuro
| ANWB Koerslijst | Keuro | |
|---|---|---|
| Method | Afschrijvingsformule | Current listings |
| Data | Catalogusprijs + leeftijd + km | Live market prices |
| Updates | Periodiek | Daily |
| Price | Gratis | Free |
| Email required | No | No |
| Represents | Theoretische waarde | What the market asks right now |
Why a formula falls short
A depreciation formula works with list price, age and mileage. What it does not include: current supply and demand. And that fluctuates considerably.
- ▸ Diesels. After the nitrogen crisis, demand for diesels dropped sharply. The formula did not keep up. Buyers paid less; the price list said otherwise.
- ▸ Electric cars. High demand and limited supply push popular EV prices above the formula. Subsidies and lease rules amplify that effect.
- ▸ Popular models. A Volkswagen Golf or Toyota Yaris retains its value better than the average formula suggests, purely due to consistent demand.
Only when both add up can you say something meaningful about the value: the price and the mileage both need to be in line with what the market asks right now.
Want to find out the market value of your own car right now?
Enter your plate →See an example
See the current market value of a Volkswagen Golf, a Toyota Yaris, an Opel Corsa or a Fiat 500.
Frequently asked questions
The ANWB Koerslijst calculates a car's value using a depreciation formula. Based on the list price, year and mileage, it determines a theoretical daily value. Insurers and dealers use it as a reference, but the result is not a market price.
Both use a depreciation formula. The difference lies in the data sources and target audience. ANWB targets private users and insurers; Autotelex is primarily a dealer tool. We are based on current listings: no formula.
For insurance purposes yes, but as a benchmark for what a car actually fetches on the market, not always. The formula does not account for current supply and demand. A popular model may be worth more than the koerslijst says; a diesel may be worth less due to market timing.
We are a free alternative that does not calculate daily value via a formula, but shows what comparable cars are advertising for today. No account needed, no payment. Search by make, model and year and see the current market prices directly.