Land Rover Defender prices have climbed so far that even pre-Defender models are getting treated like blue-chip collectibles. Case in point is this 1989 Land Rover 90 V8 County Station Wagon being offered in the U.K. for £49,950 (around $66,500).
Sold new by Dutton Forshaw in Aylesbury and now with just two owners and 85,854 miles, it is being marketed as a “superbly original” truck that has spent more than a decade tucked away in a heated garage as part of a classic collection.

Original V8 County, Lightly Used
Although it predates the Defender badge, this is the template everyone thinks of: short-wheelbase 90, Ermine White paint, alpine windows, grey County cloth and a carb-fed 3.5-liter Rover V8 under the hood. Power goes through a manual gearbox and permanent four-wheel drive, with the ad emphasizing that the truck still looks and feels like a lightly used working Land Rover rather than a freshly restored showpiece.
Documentation includes the current V5, MOT through September 2026, original owner’s manuals and a stack of service invoices. For buyers who spend time scrolling older listings like this 1986 Land Rover Defender 110 for sale, the appeal is obvious: it is rare to find a V8 County that has not been beaten up, modified or worked to death.

Preserved Rather Than Modified
Unlike many classic 90s that have been rebuilt into overland rigs, this one is presented largely as Land Rover intended, right down to its period-correct trim. PistonHeads notes it has covered only a couple of thousand miles since 2013, and photos show straight panels, clean seams and an interior that lines up with the claimed history.
That makes it a different proposition from heavily updated restomods or newer factory-built specials, and closer in spirit to stock later examples such as this 2000 Land Rover Defender 90 listing. The question is less whether it looks the part, and more whether a buyer is willing to use it once they have paid collector money for it.

Pricey In A World Of Defender Alternatives
At nearly £50,000, this 90 V8 County sits above well-used V8s and below re-engineered or “Works V8” builds, in a market where almost anything shaped like an old Defender seems to find a home. It also has to live alongside a whole wave of reinterpretations and imitators.
For buyers who want the real thing, the premium here buys originality, paperwork and a truck that appears to have survived three and a half decades without being turned into a farm hack or a trail toy. Whether that makes sense as a purchase depends on how much value you put on stepping into an old Land Rover that still feels close to the way it left the showroom in 1989.