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The Cadillac CT6 with a 3.0-liter twin-turbo engine offers executive luxury at an accessible price, valued for its performance and comfort. Originally priced around $80–90K, it now costs mid-$20Ks due to depreciation. This sedan embodies American luxury while providing easier serviceability compared to European rivals, making it an attractive option.
#ItsALifestyle isn’t just a hashtag—it’s a mindset. Why settle for the same cookie-cutter economy lease when, for nearly the same payment, you could be rolling in the kind of car your boss would drive to the country club? Luxury doesn’t always mean a trust fund—it just means knowing where to look.
Enter the Cadillac CT6. Specifically, the version with the 3.0-liter twin-turbo (3.0TT) engine—a car that combines the power and refinement you’d expect from the Germans, with the quiet confidence of American luxury. It’s big, it’s comfortable, it’s fast, and thanks to depreciation, it’s shockingly attainable.
So today, we’re taking a closer look at why the CT6 3.0TT deserves your attention, how it stacks up in the real world, and why it might just be the best luxury bargain hiding in plain sight.

There’s a sweet spot in the car-buying universe where frugal Dave Ramsey and “live-like-a-boss” PJ Exotic Car hacks overlap. While neither Dave or PJ would likely look twice at this car your not trying to live like your broke and maybe your not ready to invest $1500 mo in a car without a back seat or at least one large enough for someone over 6 to fit well anyway. So if your chasing the lifestyle and need a daily that still looks relevant, comfortable and hauls a little ass. todays Its A Lifetyle pick is the proper representative of american Luxury and premium luxury the Cadillac CT6. It’s the land of big-ticket luxury cars after the depreciation fairy has waved her wand—and the Cadillac CT6 with the twin-turbo V6 lives right there.
When new, the CT6 in 3.0-liter twin-turbo form stickered around $80–90K, packing tech and performance that could hang with European flagships. Today, you can snag a clean, well-optioned example for mid-$20Ks—less than some midsize family sedans. This is how you live well without spending like you hate money.
Offered from 2016–2019, Cadillac’s 3.0-liter twin-turbo V6 made 404 horsepower and 400 lb-ft, paired to an 8-speed auto in earlier years and a 10-speed in some 2019 models. It drove all four wheels in most trims, sending the CT6 to 60 mph in about 5.0 seconds—not CTS-V quick, but impressive for a full-sized luxury sedan.
Key trims included:

The CT6 3.0TT sits in an odd but glorious niche: European-rival performance, American serviceability. Need a water pump or suspension component? You’re not dealing with “Audi A8, $1,700 for a control arm” territory. Parts are easier to source, and you won’t have to explain to your mechanic how to remove a transmission with a special tool from Bavaria.
For context:
If Dave Ramsey were into luxury sedans (he’s not—he’s into Camrys and paid-off mortgages), the CT6 3.0TT would be his guilty pleasure. You’re buying a car that someone else already took the $50K depreciation hit on.

If PJ of Exotic Car Hacks were advising? He’d say, “Roll up to the valet in a Panaray-equipped Platinum, and everyone thinks you’ve got CEO money.” Would either approve? —Maybe: Dave because it’s financially smart, PJ because it still looks like money and your kinda playing his game with driving a great car without losing money or at least a lot less than others are. Both would likely at least commend you for hustling better than the masses and not eating the giant depreciation that just makes your bank even more rich.
For the truly unhinged (and well-funded), Cadillac built the CT6 with a hand-assembled 4.2-liter twin-turbo V8—known as the Blackwing. (Not the same but used later for the CT4 and CT5 as a trim)

Support exists, but hardly at all this isn’t an ATS-V.
The Cadillac CT6 3.0TT is the kind of depreciated flagship that lets you drive like an exec without paying like one. Between the Lincoln Continental’s American elegance and the Audi A8’s Euro prestige, the CT6 blends both worlds with lower ownership headaches.

It’s big enough to stretch out in the back, fast enough to embarrass a base 5-Series, and smart enough to drive itself down the highway while you sip coffee. Whether you’re leaning toward Ramsey-level frugality or PJ-level flash, the CT6 makes both possible.
| Model / Year | Approx. Original Price* | Current Value | Depreciation | Annual Avg. Drop** |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 CT6 (V6) | ~$46K–52K | ~$28.6K | ~38% | ~12.7% |
| 2018 CT6 (V6) | ~$30K–35K (in 2022) | ~$15.6K | ~45% | ~15% |
| 2020 CT6‑V (V8) | ~$62K–64K | ~$42.4K | ~31% | ~6.2% |
*Estimated based on market trends; varies by trim/options.
**Straight-line average (real depreciation is steeper early on).
If you’re buying a 2019–2020 CT6 3.0TT today (say, ~$30K), these cars are likely already past the steepest depreciation curve. Based on historical trends:
This aligns with broader Cadillac depreciation patterns—CarEdge shows models generally retain ~60% of their value by year three, plateauing afterward. (*Markets change) cadillacforums.com+3Edmunds+3Kbb.com+3Kbb.com+2motorwerkscadillac.com+2CarEdge+1Edmundsmotorwerkscadillac.com+6CarEdge+6Kbb.com+6

Some people define themselves by having something brand-new. Others just want to look flashy. But living the It’s a Lifestyle way isn’t about compromise—or pretending. It’s about playing the value game smarter than everyone else and enjoying the ride to the next level.
When you buy a luxury car near the bottom of its depreciation curve, you don’t just get a good deal—you set yourself up for a car that can actually pay you back on the back end.
Contrast that with leasing: the guy bragging about his brand-new car and warranty is really just bragging about a $399/mo rental. After three years, he turns in the keys and has nothing to show for $14,364 (assuming no fees and no mileage overages). Leasing is basically a payment treadmill with no equity.
Here’s where depreciation wins:
Your total cost of ownership = $5,000, or about $138/mo. Even if you factor in a repair or two, you’re still miles ahead. And unlike a lease, your car isn’t holding you hostage on mileage limits—you can take the road trips, pile on the smiles, and not worry about a penalty at turn-in.
At the end of those three years, you roll into your next depreciated flagship while the lease crowd starts the cycle all over again. You’re not a poser—you’re just leveraging value, equity, and smarter ownership to live well now.
The math works. The lifestyle works. That’s why we drive depreciated luxury and sports cars It’s a Lifestyle.










Complete the luxury experience with style the Speed-Luxury way -approved gear that you can afford to flex with your CT6:

