The 1965 Aston Martin Owned By Robert Plant Costs $1 Million
Would you think that a rock star from the UK would drive a car that wasn’t the most popular at the time? Plant bought this 1965 Aston Martin DB5 in 1970 after Led Zeppelin turned the 12-bar blues into stadium rock euphoria, but he rarely got to drive it because the band was always on the road. You don’t buy a car like this and then leave it in the garage for the rest of your life, so he must have driven it at least a few times after buying it.

The 1965 Aston Martin Owned By Robert Plant Costs 1 Million Dollars
After it was sold, the motorcycle was kept in a “controlled” environment until 2017, when Nicholas Mee & Co. decided to sell it again. If you have enough money to buy a stairway to heaven, you can buy this old British car that has been well taken care of and is in perfect condition (that works out to about a million dollars).
Phantom V, John Lennon’s Psychedelic Rolls-Royce, Is Valued At $240,000
When the people who make something keep making changes, it might be hard to figure out how much it will cost. This is true of many one-of-a-kind cars and songs from the 1960s that broke new ground. John Lennon made his first appearance in 1967 in his cool Phantom V, which had a Sgt. Pepper’s paint job. This shocking feast for the eyes shocked the British, who were used to things being a certain way. It also started a new era of strange music and design. This vehicle is the best example of John Lennon’s rebellious attitude against the system.

Phantom V John Lennons Psychedelic Rolls Royce Is Valued At 240000 Dollars
After John Lennon died, his Phantom became an official museum exhibit. Since then, it has been kept in perfect shape. It is often included in retrospectives of the Beatles, and Rolls-Royce used it in their 2017 piece called “The Great Eight Phantoms.” Even though no one knows how much it costs to build the car, Beatles Histories author Steve Clifford thinks it was probably around a quarter of a million dollars, even though the car’s value has since risen to the point where it is now “priceless.”