{"id":99313,"date":"2026-07-13T07:48:35","date_gmt":"2026-07-13T07:48:35","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/?p=99313"},"modified":"2026-07-13T09:23:16","modified_gmt":"2026-07-13T09:23:16","slug":"porsche-car-parts-price-list","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/porsche-car-parts-price-list\/","title":{"rendered":"Lista de precios de recambios para Porsche: lo que realmente pagar\u00e1s (concesionario, mercado de recambios o directamente de f\u00e1brica)"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<!DOCTYPE html><html><head><meta charset=\"utf-8\"><meta name=\"viewport\" content=\"width=device-width, initial-scale=1\"><title>Porsche Car Parts Price List: What You&#8217;ll Actually Pay (Dealer vs. Aftermarket vs. Factory-Direct)<\/title><\/head><body><!-- \u2193\u2193\u2193 The deployable fragment begins here. \u2193\u2193\u2193 --><div class=\"bd-post\"><style>@import url('https:\/\/fonts.googleapis.com\/css2?family=Mulish:ital,wght@0,400;0,700;0,900;1,900&display=swap');\n.bd-post {  --prose-width: 680px;\n  \/* Spacing tokens *\/  --gap-attach: 16px; 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line-height: 1.5; }.bd-post .bp-cta-end-btn { display: inline-flex; align-items: center; padding: 16px 40px; background: var(--text-on-accent); color: var(--accent); border: 1px solid var(--text-on-accent); border-radius: 4px; font-size: 15px; font-weight: 700; text-decoration: none; transition: all .2s ease-out; cursor: pointer; }.bd-post .bp-cta-end-btn:hover { background: var(--inverse-bg); color: var(--text-on-inverse); border-color: var(--inverse-bg); }\n\/* \u2500\u2500 Sanctioned Motion \u2500\u2500 *\/@media (prefers-reduced-motion: no-preference) {  @supports (animation-timeline: view()) {    .bd-post .bd-reveal { animation: bd-fade-in linear both; animation-timeline: view(); animation-range: entry 0% entry 35%; }    @keyframes bd-fade-in { from { opacity: 0; } to { opacity: 1; } }  }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h2 { transition: color .2s ease-out, transform .2s ease-out; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h2:hover { color: var(--accent-text); transform: scale(1.02); }  .bd-post .bp-1-tiers, .bd-post .bp-2-tiers, .bd-post .bp-3-oem { transition: transform .2s ease-out, box-shadow .2s ease-out; }  .bd-post .bp-1-tiers:hover, .bd-post .bp-2-tiers:hover, .bd-post .bp-3-oem:hover { transform: translateY(-2px); box-shadow: 0 6px 18px rgba(0,0,0,0.08); }  .bd-post .bd-post-article p a, .bd-post .bd-post-article li a { transition: color .2s ease-out, text-decoration-color .2s ease-out; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article p a:hover, .bd-post .bd-post-article li a:hover { color: var(--inverse-bg); }}\n\/* \u2500\u2500 Tablet (\u22641024px) \u2500\u2500 *\/@media (max-width: 1024px) {  .bd-post .bp-3-oem { grid-template-columns: repeat(2, 1fr); }}\n\/* \u2500\u2500 Mobile (\u2264768px) \u2500\u2500 *\/@media (max-width: 768px) {  .bd-post { padding: 16px; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h1 { font-size: 32px; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h2 { font-size: 30px; margin-top: 32px; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h3 { font-size: 26px; margin-top: 24px; }  .bd-post .bd-post-article h4 { font-size: 17px; }\n  .bd-post .bp-1-tiers { grid-template-columns: 1fr; }  .bd-post .bp-3-oem { grid-template-columns: repeat(2, 1fr); }  .bd-post .bp-cta-mid { flex-direction: column; text-align: center; }  .bd-post .bp-cta-mid-btn { width: 100%; justify-content: center; }  .bd-post .bp-cta-end-icon { width: 32px; height: 32px; }  .bd-post .bp-cta-end-title { font-size: 20px; }}<\/style>\n<article class=\"bd-post-article\">\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h2>Why Are Porsche Parts So Expensive?<\/h2>\n<p>Yes, Porsche parts are expensive \u2014 and the numbers back this up. In the UK market, the average Porsche repair costs \u00a31,802, compared to a market average of \u00a3792. That&#8217;s more than double. BMW owners pay \u00a31,120, Mercedes-Benz owners \u00a31,097 \u2014 Porsche is alone at the top of the cost curve.<\/p>\n<p>But &#8220;expensive&#8221; is not the same as &#8220;overpriced.&#8221; Three structural factors explain most of the premium.<\/p>\n<p>First, <strong>production volume<\/strong>. Porsche builds roughly 300,000 cars per year. Toyota builds over 10 million. The mold development cost for a headlight housing or an intake manifold doesn&#8217;t scale down with production volume \u2014 the tooling costs roughly the same whether you&#8217;re making parts for 30,000 cars or 3 million. That fixed cost gets amortized over far fewer units.<\/p>\n<p>Second, <strong>material choices<\/strong>. Porsche uses carbon fiber components (raw material cost around $100 per kilogram), thermoplastic composites, and high-performance alloys as standard. These aren&#8217;t cosmetic upgrades \u2014 they&#8217;re structural. When a brake rotor is engineered to handle repeated 150-to-50-mph stops on a racetrack without fading, the metallurgy alone costs more than an entire economy-car brake system.<\/p>\n<p>Third, <strong>labor complexity<\/strong>. The rear-mounted flat-six engine that defines the 911 requires roughly double the camshafts and exhaust plumbing of a front-mounted inline engine of similar displacement. A simple engine-out service \u2014 required for many repairs that would be engine-in on a conventional car \u2014 takes 4 to 5 hours before the actual repair begins. At dealer labor rates of $120 to $159 per hour, that&#8217;s $500 to $800 spent before a single part is replaced.<\/p>\n<p>The price tag on the box is only half the story. <em>Where<\/em> you buy often matters more than <em>what<\/em> you buy. And that&#8217;s where a real price list \u2014 broken down by part category, model era, and sourcing channel \u2014 changes the game entirely.<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h2>Modern Porsche Parts: What to Budget by Category<\/h2>\n<p>Before diving into specific prices, it helps to think about Porsche parts in three budget tiers. Routine wear items \u2014 filters, brake pads, spark plugs \u2014 run $50 to $500 per part. Mid-level components like brake rotors, suspension struts, and cooling system parts land in the $500 to $3,000 range. Major assemblies \u2014 transmissions, engine internals, body control modules \u2014 can push past $10,000. Knowing which tier you&#8217;re in before you open the catalog keeps the numbers from feeling like ambushes.<\/p><\/div>\n<!-- BP-1: Modern Parts Budget Tiers --><div class=\"bp-1-tiers bd-reveal\">  <div class=\"bp-1-tier\">    <div class=\"bp-1-num\">1<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-label\">Routine Wear<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-desc\">Filters, brake pads, spark plugs, fluids. Regular maintenance items you&#8217;ll replace on schedule.<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-price\">$50 \u2013 $500 per part<\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-1-tier\">    <div class=\"bp-1-num\">2<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-label\">Mid-Level Components<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-desc\">Brake rotors, suspension struts, cooling system, clutch components.<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-price\">$500 \u2013 $3,000 per part<\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-1-tier\">    <div class=\"bp-1-num\">3<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-label\">Major Assemblies<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-desc\">Transmissions, engine internals, body control modules, air suspension.<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-1-price\">$3,000 \u2013 $10,000+<\/div>  <\/div><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h3>Routine Maintenance Parts: Brakes, Filters and Fluids<\/h3>\n<p>The easiest way to cut your Porsche parts bill without sacrificing quality is to understand who actually makes the parts in the Porsche-branded box. The same Brembo factory that produces brake rotors for the 911 GT3 also sells those rotors under the Brembo name \u2014 often at 40% to 50% less.<\/p>\n<p>A full set of four brake rotors for a 997.2 Carrera illustrates the gap perfectly. Porsche-branded rotors run about $1,300 for the set. The same rotors, manufactured by Sebro (an OEM supplier to Porsche), cost $576 to $737. Zimmermann, another factory supplier, charges $703. The metallurgy is identical. The production line is the same. The difference is the logo on the box.<\/p>\n<p>Spark plugs and ignition coils follow the same pattern. A dealer will quote upwards of $1,000 for a full set with labor. Buy Bosch or Beru coils and plugs yourself \u2014 the exact same parts Porsche installs at the factory \u2014 and the parts bill drops to around $350. Even an oil change tells the story: DIY with quality oil and a Mahle filter costs about $120. The same service at a dealer runs $400 or more.<\/p>\n<p>The PDK dual-clutch transmission \u2014 used across the 911, Cayman, Boxster, and Panamera lineup \u2014 deserves special mention. Porsche describes the transmission fluid as &#8220;lifetime fill.&#8221; Independent Porsche specialists who have opened PDK units at 120,000 kilometers strongly disagree. A PDK fluid and filter service costs $400 to $600 at an independent shop and $800 to $1,200 at a dealer. Skipping it can turn a $600 preventive service into a $5,000 to $10,000 rebuild. The math is not subtle.<\/p>\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/porsche-car-parts-price-list-1.webp\" style=\"width: 512px; height: 384px; max-width: 100%; object-fit: cover; border-radius: 12px;margin: 30px auto; display: block; box-shadow: 10px 10px 60px Opx rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35); transition: all0.3s ease; cursor: pointer;\" onmouseover=\"this.style.transform='translateY(-5px) scale(1.03)';this.style.boxShadow='15px 25px 80px 0px rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.45)\"onmouseout=\"this.style.transform='translateY(0) scale(1); this.style.boxShadow='10px 10px 60px Opxrgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35)\">\n<h3>Major Components: What a Big Repair Really Costs<\/h3>\n<p>When the repair moves beyond wear items into major assemblies, the numbers escalate fast \u2014 but knowing the range ahead of time takes the fear out of the equation.<\/p>\n<p>The IMS (intermediate shaft) bearing on 996 and early 997-generation 911s (model years 1998\u20132008) is the most infamous line item in modern Porsche ownership. The bearing itself is a modest component, but replacing it requires engine disassembly. Independent shops charge $3,000 to $5,000 for a preventive IMS bearing upgrade. A Porsche dealer charges $5,000 to $8,000. The cost of ignoring it? A bearing failure destroys the engine \u2014 a $20,000-plus catastrophe. This is not a &#8220;wait and see&#8221; item.<\/p>\n<p>PDK clutch pack replacement, typically needed between 80,000 and 120,000 miles depending on driving style, runs $3,000 to $6,000 at an independent specialist. Dealers quote $5,000 to $10,000. For Panamera and Cayenne owners, air suspension struts represent another predictable expense: each strut costs $1,500 to $2,500, and a full system replacement runs $5,000 to $8,000.<\/p>\n<p>Timing chain service varies by model. A 911 timing chain replacement runs roughly $950 to $1,490 in parts and labor at an independent shop. A Cayman costs slightly more ($1,110 to $1,745), while the Panamera \u2014 with its more complex engine access \u2014 reaches $1,375 to $2,160.<\/p>\n<h3>Electronics and Body: The Hidden Budget Killers<\/h3>\n<p>Modern Porsches pack more electronic modules than most owners realize, and when they fail, the costs catch people off guard. The Body Control Module (BCM) on 2015\u20132025 911, Cayman, and Panamera models is particularly vulnerable \u2014 the primary failure cause is water intrusion through compromised seals. A dealer replacement with a new module and PIWIS programming runs $730 to $1,650. The budget alternative \u2014 a used module plus mail-in cloning \u2014 drops the total to $350 to $750.<\/p>\n<p>LED headlight assemblies are another silent budget shock. On the 991 and 992-generation 911, the headlight is a sealed LED unit. When a single LED fails, the entire assembly must be replaced \u2014 at $1,500 to $3,000 per side. There is no bulb to swap.<\/p>\n<p>One more detail most buyers discover too late: if you order a part from a Porsche dealer&#8217;s warehouse and return it, several major dealers now charge a 20% restocking fee. Measure twice, order once.<\/p>\n<p>All of the above describes <em>modern<\/em> Porsche ownership. If your Porsche was built before 1998, the pricing rules change completely. Availability, not MSRP, becomes the currency.<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h2>Classic Porsche Parts: Scarcity, Pricing and What&#8217;s Still Available<\/h2>\n<p>For classic Porsche parts, the price is not set by a catalog. It is set by whether the part still exists.<\/p>\n<p>With a modern car, you look up a part number and get a price. For a 1973 911 or a 1958 356, you first ask whether anyone still makes the part at all. If the answer is no, the price is whatever the last person paid \u2014 plus whatever the next person is willing to offer. This is not a retail market. It&#8217;s a scarcity market.<\/p>\n<p>To navigate it, think in three tiers:<\/p>\n<ul><li><strong>Available (Green):<\/strong> The part is still in production, either through Porsche Classic or a reputable aftermarket manufacturer. Pricing is predictable \u2014 roughly 1 to 1.5 times the cost of a comparable modern part.<\/li><li><strong>Discontinued but Reproducible (Yellow):<\/strong> The original is gone, but independent specialists or dedicated craftsmen produce high-quality reproductions. Expect to pay 1.5 to 3 times the modern equivalent.<\/li><li><strong>Rare or Unobtainable (Red):<\/strong> No new stock exists anywhere. Your options are NOS (new old stock \u2014 original parts found in storage), used parts from donor cars, or custom reverse-engineered manufacturing. Prices have no ceiling.<\/li><\/ul>\n<h3>Air-Cooled Icons: 356 and 911 (1963\u20131998) Parts Pricing<\/h3>\n<p>The air-cooled 911 and the 356 enjoy the strongest aftermarket support of any classic Porsche \u2014 but even here, the gap between &#8220;available&#8221; and &#8220;unobtainable&#8221; is widening.<\/p>\n<p>In the green tier, routine mechanical parts remain surprisingly accessible. Brake rotors for a 911 SC cost $150 to $250 each. Suspension bushings, ignition components, and standard oil seals are readily available through Pelican Parts, FCP Euro, and specialist suppliers.<\/p>\n<p>The yellow tier is where most restoration projects spend their money. High-quality stainless steel exhaust systems \u2014 the go-to replacement for rusted factory exhausts \u2014 run $800 to $1,500. Body panels, interior trim pieces, and reproduction glass all fall into this category. A full set of rubber seals for an air-cooled 911 costs $1,500 to $3,000 for parts alone \u2014 and this is one area where the Porsche community is unanimous: buy genuine Porsche rubber. Reproduction windshield and door seals are notorious for poor fit. Spend $200 on a repro seal, discover the door won&#8217;t close or the windshield leaks, and you&#8217;ll spend $800 on the OE version plus labor to redo the job.<\/p>\n<p>The red tier is where things get interesting \u2014 and expensive. Original Pasha and Pepita seat fabrics, early 911 wood-rimmed steering wheels, and S-model gauges trade hands at prices determined entirely by scarcity. Porsche Classic has recognized the problem and recently reissued several classic seat fabrics in factory-grade, fire-tested, color-fast material \u2014 a response to years of substandard reproductions. For the ultra-rare 959 (only 292 built), Porsche now 3D-prints discontinued parts using selective laser melting \u2014 about 30 components are currently available this way, with more in development.<\/p>\n<p>The broader trend is concerning. Suppliers are retooling production lines away from low-volume legacy parts. Electronic modules like E-GAS units and DME\/ECU controllers for 1990s Porsches are effectively extinct as new stock. Unlike a mechanical part that can be machined, a proprietary electronic module with obsolete chips has no straightforward reproduction path.<\/p>\n<p>For shops and distributors who serve the classic Porsche market, the competitive edge is no longer just price \u2014 it&#8217;s <em>access<\/em>. The suppliers who thrive are those who can either find what others cannot, or make what no one else still produces. Reverse engineering \u2014 3D scanning an original sample, creating CAD models, building molds, and manufacturing to the original equipment specification \u2014 has become the ultimate backstop when factory support disappears entirely.<\/p><\/div>\n<!-- BP-2: Classic Parts Availability Tiers --><div class=\"bp-2-tiers bd-reveal\">  <div class=\"bp-2-row\">    <div class=\"bp-2-dot green\"><\/div>    <div class=\"bp-2-content\">      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-label\">Available<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-desc\">Still in production through Porsche Classic or reputable aftermarket manufacturers. Pricing is predictable \u2014 roughly 1\u00d7 to 1.5\u00d7 modern equivalents. Brake rotors, suspension bushings, ignition components, standard seals.<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-note\">Example: 911 SC brake rotors \u2014 $150\u2013250 each<\/div>    <\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-2-row\">    <div class=\"bp-2-dot yellow\"><\/div>    <div class=\"bp-2-content\">      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-label\">Discontinued but Reproducible<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-desc\">Original is gone, but independent specialists produce high-quality reproductions. Expect 1.5\u00d7 to 3\u00d7 modern equivalents. Exhaust systems, body panels, interior trim.<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-note\">Example: Stainless steel exhaust \u2014 $800\u20131,500<\/div>    <\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-2-row\">    <div class=\"bp-2-dot red\"><\/div>    <div class=\"bp-2-content\">      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-label\">Rare or Unobtainable<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-desc\">No new stock exists. Your options: NOS finds, donor-car salvage, or custom reverse-engineered manufacturing. Prices have no ceiling \u2014 scarcity alone sets the market.<\/div>      <div class=\"bp-2-tier-note\">Example: Early 911 wood-rimmed steering wheels \u2014 price determined entirely by availability<\/div>    <\/div>  <\/div><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h3>The Transitional Era: 914, 924, 944, 968 and 928<\/h3>\n<p>If air-cooled 911s enjoy strong aftermarket support, the front-engine, transaxle Porsches of the 1970s through 1990s live in a tougher neighborhood. These cars have smaller enthusiast bases, which means fewer aftermarket manufacturers are willing to invest in tooling.<\/p>\n<p>The 944&#8217;s timing belt and water pump service is the defining example. The parts themselves are affordable \u2014 $300 to $500 for the belt, pump, and rollers. But the front-engine, rear-transaxle layout means the labor runs $800 to $1,200. The 928&#8217;s early onboard computer systems represent the opposite problem: the parts are technically simple by modern standards, but virtually no one reproduces them. Used parts from dismantled cars are the only source.<\/p>\n<p>For 914 owners, body panels are the chronic pain point. The 914&#8217;s chassis is prone to rust, and replacement sheet metal is extremely scarce. A car that needs structural metalwork can easily exceed its market value in repair costs. The temptation to walk away is real \u2014 which is exactly why specialist fabricators who can reproduce one-off panels command premium prices.<\/p>\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/porsche-car-parts-price-list-2.webp\" style=\"width: 512px; height: 384px; max-width: 100%; object-fit: cover; border-radius: 12px;margin: 30px auto; display: block; box-shadow: 10px 10px 60px Opx rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35); transition: all0.3s ease; cursor: pointer;\" onmouseover=\"this.style.transform='translateY(-5px) scale(1.03)';this.style.boxShadow='15px 25px 80px 0px rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.45)\"onmouseout=\"this.style.transform='translateY(0) scale(1); this.style.boxShadow='10px 10px 60px Opxrgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35)\">\n<h3>When Parts Disappear: Custom Manufacturing and Reverse Engineering<\/h3>\n<p>There comes a point in every long-term restoration where the catalogue goes silent. The part exists only as a worn-out original in the restorer&#8217;s hand. At this stage, three options remain.<\/p>\n<p>Porsche Classic operates a parts request system where enthusiasts can petition for discontinued components to be remanufactured. The process works \u2014 Porsche has reinstated dozens of parts through this channel \u2014 but it operates on Porsche&#8217;s timeline, not yours.<\/p>\n<p>For metal components, small-batch CNC machining and 3D printing (selective laser melting for metals) have become viable. A one-off aluminum bracket or steel linkage can be reproduced from a 3D scan for hundreds to low thousands of dollars, depending on complexity.<\/p>\n<p>For rubber, plastic, glass, and multi-material assemblies, the only complete solution is reverse engineering with mold fabrication. This is industrial-grade work: 3D scanning the original part, creating tooling, producing samples, and running production batches. The mold cost alone can range from $2,000 to $10,000, and minimum order quantities typically start at 100 to 500 pieces, varying by material and process complexity. For a restoration shop that needs one part, this route makes no sense. For a parts distributor or a collective of restorers pooling demand, it is often the only way to bring a dead part back to life.<\/p><\/div>\n<!-- BP-cta-mid: Mid-Article CTA (Inverse) --><div class=\"bp-cta-mid bd-reveal\">  <svg class=\"bp-cta-mid-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><circle cx=\"11\" cy=\"11\" r=\"8\"\/><path d=\"m21 21-4.3-4.3\"\/><path d=\"M11 8v6\"\/><path d=\"M8 11h6\"\/><\/svg>  <div class=\"bp-cta-mid-body\">    <div class=\"bp-cta-mid-title\">Need a discontinued Porsche part reproduced?<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-cta-mid-text\">Some suppliers reverse-engineer from your original sample \u2014 OE spec, factory pricing, MOQ as low as 100 pcs.<\/div>  <\/div>  <a class=\"bp-cta-mid-btn\" href=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/contact\/\" target=\"_self\" rel=\"noopener\">Explore Porsche Parts Catalog<\/a><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h2>Dealer vs. Aftermarket vs. Factory-Direct: Where Your Money Actually Goes<\/h2>\n<p>Every dollar you spend on a Porsche part flows through one of three channels \u2014 and the price difference between them can be staggering. Understanding the cost structure of each channel, rather than just price-shopping blindly, is what separates seasoned buyers from first-timers.<\/p>\n<p>Think of it as a cost-quality-convenience triangle. Dealers offer maximum convenience with zero verification effort \u2014 and charge accordingly. Aftermarket retailers offer steep discounts on mechanically identical parts, but require you to know which brands are genuine OEM suppliers. Factory-direct sourcing offers the lowest unit prices, but demands volume commitments and quality verification that make it impractical for individual owners. Each step down in price requires a step up in your own due diligence.<\/p>\n<h3>The Dealer Channel: Convenience at a Premium<\/h3>\n<p>Porsche dealer parts departments have a specific job, and they do it well. You walk in (or click through an authorized dealer&#8217;s online catalog), provide your VIN, and walk out with a guaranteed correct, warranty-backed genuine part. No research required. No risk of fitment issues.<\/p>\n<p>What you pay for that convenience: the part&#8217;s MSRP plus a dealer markup that typically runs 15% to 30%, plus labor at $120 to $159 per hour. A single part can illustrate the premium. The SRS (airbag) control module for a 986-generation Boxster carries Porsche part number 996.618.221.01. In a Porsche-branded box, it lists at $1,150. The exact same component, under Audi part number 8N0.959.655, sells for $697.50. Same part. Same factory. Different box. Forty percent difference.<\/p>\n<p>Dealers also have unique capabilities that no independent source can match: PIWIS diagnostic programming, factory recall services, and warranty-covered repairs. For a car still under factory warranty, or for programming-locked electronic modules, the dealer is the only rational choice. For everything else, there are alternatives.<\/p>\n<img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2026\/07\/porsche-car-parts-price-list-3.webp\" style=\"width: 512px; height: 384px; max-width: 100%; object-fit: cover; border-radius: 12px;margin: 30px auto; display: block; box-shadow: 10px 10px 60px Opx rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35); transition: all0.3s ease; cursor: pointer;\" onmouseover=\"this.style.transform='translateY(-5px) scale(1.03)';this.style.boxShadow='15px 25px 80px 0px rgba(210, 221, 224, 0.45)\"onmouseout=\"this.style.transform='translateY(0) scale(1); this.style.boxShadow='10px 10px 60px Opxrgba(210, 221, 224, 0.35)\">\n<h3>The Aftermarket Sweet Spot: OEM Brands Without the Logo<\/h3>\n<p>The single most valuable skill in Porsche ownership is learning which aftermarket brands are actually the factory suppliers selling their own products under their own names. The list is surprisingly consistent across decades of Porsche production:<\/p>\n<ul><li><strong>Brakes:<\/strong> Brembo, Sebro, Zimmermann, Textar \u2014 all factory suppliers. A Brembo rotor in a Brembo box is mechanically identical to a Brembo rotor in a Porsche box, at 30% to 50% less.<\/li><li><strong>Ignition and sensors:<\/strong> Bosch and Beru supply Porsche&#8217;s coils, spark plugs, oxygen sensors, and MAF sensors. The price gap on a full ignition service is 50% to 65%.<\/li><li><strong>Filtration:<\/strong> Mahle and Mann supply oil filters, air filters, and fuel filters. Expect to save 30% to 50% versus Porsche-branded equivalents.<\/li><li><strong>Suspension and steering:<\/strong> Sachs and Lemf\u00f6rder manufacture control arms, tie rods, and strut mounts for Porsche. Same part, 30% to 50% savings.<\/li><\/ul>\n<p>Where to buy matters as much as what to buy. FCP Euro offers a lifetime warranty on every part they sell \u2014 including consumables like brake pads, oil filters, and even engine oil. That warranty is unique in the industry and fundamentally changes the economics of routine maintenance. Pelican Parts combines a comprehensive catalog with active technical forums where you can verify part compatibility before ordering.<\/p>\n<p>The community&#8217;s one near-universal rule: rubber seals, weatherstripping, and body trim pieces should be genuine Porsche, period. The Early 911S Registry forums are filled with cautionary tales of reproduction windshield seals that leaked, door seals that prevented proper closure, and hood seals that deformed within a year. Saving $100 on a door seal only to pay $500 in labor to replace it with the OE version is not frugality \u2014 it&#8217;s false economy.<\/p><\/div>\n<!-- BP-3: OEM Brand Equivalency Reference --><div class=\"bp-3-oem bd-reveal\">  <div class=\"bp-3-cell\">    <svg class=\"bp-3-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><circle cx=\"12\" cy=\"12\" r=\"10\"\/><circle cx=\"12\" cy=\"12\" r=\"6\"\/><\/svg>    <div class=\"bp-3-cat\">Brakes<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-brands\">Brembo \u00b7 Sebro<br>Zimmermann \u00b7 Textar<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-savings\">Save 30\u201350%<\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-3-cell\">    <svg class=\"bp-3-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><polygon points=\"13 2 3 14 12 14 11 22 21 10 12 10 13 2\"\/><\/svg>    <div class=\"bp-3-cat\">Ignition &amp; Sensors<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-brands\">Bosch \u00b7 Beru<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-savings\">Save 50\u201365%<\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-3-cell\">    <svg class=\"bp-3-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><polygon points=\"22 3 2 3 10 12.46 10 19 14 21 14 12.46 22 3\"\/><\/svg>    <div class=\"bp-3-cat\">Filtration<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-brands\">Mahle \u00b7 Mann<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-savings\">Save 30\u201350%<\/div>  <\/div>  <div class=\"bp-3-cell\">    <svg class=\"bp-3-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><path d=\"M14.7 6.3a1 1 0 0 0 0 1.4l1.6 1.6a1 1 0 0 0 1.4 0l3.77-3.77a6 6 0 0 1-7.94 7.94l-6.91 6.91a2.12 2.12 0 0 1-3-3l6.91-6.91a6 6 0 0 1 7.94-7.94l-3.76 3.76z\"\/><\/svg>    <div class=\"bp-3-cat\">Suspension &amp; Steering<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-brands\">Sachs \u00b7 Lemf\u00f6rder<\/div>    <div class=\"bp-3-savings\">Save 30\u201350%<\/div>  <\/div><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h3>Factory-Direct and Wholesale: Is It Worth the Effort?<\/h3>\n<p>This is the channel that most Porsche price guides completely ignore \u2014 and it&#8217;s where the largest absolute discounts live. Factory-direct sourcing means buying from the manufacturer, not a retailer. For Porsche parts, this typically means aftermarket reproduction manufacturers in the major automotive production clusters.<\/p>\n<p>The price differences are not incremental. A carbon fiber front hood for a Porsche 911 (964-generation) retails for $2,000 to $3,000 through conventional channels. The same part, ordered factory-direct with a minimum order quantity of 20 to 50 units, costs $350 to $420 per unit \u2014 an 80%-plus reduction. Similar ratios apply across body panels, lighting, interior trim, and non-safety-critical mechanical components.<\/p>\n<p>But the headline price tells only part of the story. Factory-direct buying comes with structural costs that don&#8217;t appear on the invoice. Minimum order quantities are the first barrier: 50 units for interior trim, 100-plus for drivetrain components, 20 to 30 for carbon fiber pieces. Quality verification is the second: not every manufacturer holds ISO 9001 or IATF 16949 certification, and sample quality can vary significantly between production batches. Customs duties, international shipping, and the near-impossibility of returns or dispute resolution add further layers of cost and risk.<\/p>\n<p>For an individual Porsche owner, factory-direct sourcing almost never makes sense \u2014 the MOQ alone kills the proposition. For independent repair shops that can absorb volume across multiple customer projects, the economics start to work. For parts importers, wholesalers, and distributors, factory-direct sourcing <em>is<\/em> the business model.<\/p>\n<p>The market has evolved to fill the gap between individual retail and mass-volume factory orders. A handful of specialist suppliers now offer OE-specification Porsche parts at factory-direct pricing with minimum order quantities as low as 100 pieces \u2014 far below the traditional factory MOQ \u2014 while handling quality control, logistics, and small-batch consolidated shipping. For a restoration shop that needs reliable access to discontinued parts, or a distributor looking for margin without the operational overhead of managing factory relationships directly, this middle ground eliminates the old trade-off between price and convenience. <a href=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/brands\/porsche\/\">Sunway Autoparts<\/a>, for example, manufactures Porsche classic and modern parts to OE specifications and supplies them at <a href=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/for-car-parts-wholesalers\/\">factory-direct wholesale pricing<\/a> \u2014 the kind of sourcing model worth understanding if you operate on the B2B side of the Porsche parts market.<\/p><\/div>\n<div class=\"bd-reveal\"><h2>Smart Sourcing: How to Get the Best Price on Porsche Parts<\/h2>\n<p>After everything laid out above \u2014 the cost drivers, the price ranges, the channel economics \u2014 the right strategy comes down to who you are and what you need.<\/p>\n<p><strong>If your Porsche is still under warranty,<\/strong> use the dealer. The warranty coverage is worth more than any aftermarket savings, and non-dealer service can jeopardize future claims. This is not the place to optimize.<\/p>\n<p><strong>If your car is out of warranty and you want to save money without gambling on quality,<\/strong> the aftermarket OEM channel is your default. Buy Brembo, Bosch, Mahle, Sachs \u2014 the brands that make the parts for Porsche \u2014 from retailers like FCP Euro or Pelican Parts. You&#8217;ll save 30% to 50% versus dealer pricing on most maintenance items, and FCP Euro&#8217;s lifetime warranty means you only buy brake pads and oil filters once.<\/p>\n<p><strong>If you track your car or do your own work,<\/strong> mix OEM brands for routine consumables with premium aftermarket specialists for performance upgrades. Track-focused brake pads, adjustable suspension components, and lightweight body panels from reputable aftermarket manufacturers can outperform factory parts for specific use cases \u2014 just verify compatibility through model-specific forums before ordering.<\/p>\n<p><strong>If you run a restoration shop, a parts distribution business, or buy in volume,<\/strong> factory-direct sourcing with OE-spec quality belongs on your radar. Look for suppliers with verified production capabilities, documented quality control processes, and minimum order quantities that match your volume. In the classic Porsche space, suppliers with reverse-engineering capability \u2014 the ability to reproduce a discontinued part from a physical sample \u2014 are particularly valuable long-term partners. The parts that are available today will not all be available tomorrow.<\/p>\n<p>One rule applies across every scenario: never cut corners on rubber seals, weatherstripping, body trim, or safety-critical components. The money saved on a cheap reproduction part gets spent three times over in labor when it doesn&#8217;t fit, leaks, or fails. The Porsche community has learned this lesson the hard way, across decades and across forums. Learn it once, from them, for free.<\/p><\/div>\n<!-- BP-cta-end: End CTA (Accent) --><div class=\"bp-cta-end bd-reveal\">  <svg class=\"bp-cta-end-icon\" viewBox=\"0 0 24 24\" fill=\"none\" stroke=\"currentColor\" stroke-width=\"2\" stroke-linecap=\"round\" stroke-linejoin=\"round\"><circle cx=\"11\" cy=\"11\" r=\"8\"\/><path d=\"m21 21-4.3-4.3\"\/><path d=\"M11 8v6\"\/><path d=\"M8 11h6\"\/><\/svg>  <div class=\"bp-cta-end-title\">Compare Factory-Direct Porsche Parts Pricing<\/div>  <div class=\"bp-cta-end-sub\">OE-specification parts for classic and modern Porsche models. One-year warranty on all parts.<\/div>  <a class=\"bp-cta-end-btn\" href=\"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/contact\/\" target=\"_self\" rel=\"noopener\">Request a Quote<\/a><\/div>\n<\/article><\/div><!-- \u2191\u2191\u2191 Fragment ends here. \u2191\u2191\u2191 --><\/body><\/html>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Porsche Car Parts Price List: What You&#8217;ll Actually Pay (Dealer vs. Aftermarket vs. Factory-Direct) Why Are Porsche Parts So Expensive? Yes, Porsche parts are expensive \u2014<span class=\"excerpt-hellip\"> [\u2026]<\/span><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":99317,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_seopress_robots_primary_cat":"none","_seopress_titles_title":"Porsche Car Parts Price List: What You'll Actually Pay (Dealer vs. Aftermarket vs. Factory-Direct)","_seopress_titles_desc":"Confused by Porsche parts pricing? Discover why dealer costs are so high and how to save using OEM and factory-direct alternatives. Read our complete guide to sourcing the right components for your modern or classic Porsche today.","_seopress_robots_index":"","footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/99313"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=99313"}],"version-history":[{"count":1,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/99313\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":99319,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/99313\/revisions\/99319"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/99317"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=99313"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=99313"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/sunwayautoparts.com\/es\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=99313"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}