1600cc
Air-cooled
The air-cooled flat-four engine that powered a generation. Code .
- Power
- N/A
- Fuel
- Carburetor
1967: Monterey Pop Festival. San Francisco Summer of Love. Volkswagen Buses were everywhere. The Bus wasn't designed for counterculture—but it was perfect for it.
The air-cooled flat-four that powered the 1967 T1 Microbus (Type 2). Simple, reliable, and endlessly modifiable.
1500cc (1.5L) Air-cooled flat-4
50 HP
D
Pickup
4-speed manual
The Type 2 Bus became shorthand for the counterculture.
All specifications should be verified before publication.
Refer to the specifications section above for the engine code used in the 1967 Bus. The engine code is typically stamped on the engine case above the generator. For verification assistance, use our M-Code decoder tool.
Confidence: medium — This information should be verified with additional sources.
The value of a 1967 Bus varies significantly based on condition, originality, and documentation. Driver-quality examples typically range from lower values, while excellent restored or numbers-matching examples command premiums. Condition, originality, and documentation are the primary value drivers. Always get a professional appraisal for insurance or sale purposes.
Confidence: low — This information requires verification before use.
1967 Bus models were produced at various Volkswagen factories worldwide. Check the production details above for specific factory information. The factory code can often be identified through chassis number analysis.
Confidence: medium — This information should be verified with additional sources.
The 1967 Bus received several updates from the 1966 model. Refer to the specifications and editorial sections above for detailed information about year-to-year changes. Changes may include mechanical updates, safety features, or cosmetic refinements.
Confidence: medium — This information should be verified with additional sources.
Common rust areas on air-cooled Volkswagens include heater channels (under running boards), floor pans (especially front and battery tray area), front beam (suspension mounting point), rear chassis/apron (where bumper mounts), and door bottoms. The heater channels are structural and expensive to repair. Always inspect these areas carefully before purchase.
The 1968 Bus received updates from the 1967 model. Check the specifications section above for details about year-to-year evolution. Common changes across model years include safety updates, mechanical refinements, and regulatory compliance features.
Confidence: medium — This information should be verified with additional sources.
A full rotisserie restoration typically costs $25,000-$50,000+ depending on condition and level of finish. Mechanical refresh (engine, brakes, suspension) runs $5,000-$12,000. Bodywork and paint alone can be $8,000-$15,000 for quality work. DIY restorations save labor but require significant time investment (500-1,000 hours). Parts availability is generally good for classic VWs, which helps control costs.
Confidence: low — This information requires verification before use.
A well-maintained 1967 Bus can serve as a daily driver, but consider the age of the vehicle. Modern traffic, safety features, and reliability expectations differ from the era. Regular maintenance, mechanical knowledge, and realistic expectations are essential. Many owners use classic VWs as weekend drivers or hobby vehicles rather than primary transportation.
Confidence: medium — This information should be verified with additional sources.
Yes, parts availability for classic air-cooled Volkswagens is generally excellent. The large enthusiast community and aftermarket support mean most mechanical and body parts are readily available. Some year-specific trim pieces or rare options may be harder to find, but the core mechanical components are well-supported.
Research current market values for the 1967 T1 Microbus (Type 2)
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Buying tip: Condition is everything. A rusty "project" can cost more to restore than buying a finished car. Check heater channels, floor pans, and battery tray first.
Explore the variants available for this model year and find your perfect match.
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Compare all variantsNumbers matching verification increases value by 20-40%. Use our tools to verify engine codes, chassis numbers, and M-codes for your 1967 T1 Microbus (Type 2).
1967: Monterey Pop Festival. San Francisco Summer of Love. Volkswagen Buses were everywhere. The Bus wasn't designed for counterculture—but it was perfect for it.
Bay window design established since 1968 would arrive in 1968. Current design was recognizable and capable. Proportions communicated spaciousness.
Engine reliability proven. Mechanical systems representing years of refinement. The Bus platform was completely mature.
Communal space was the Bus's essence. Perfect for band tours, communal living, festival travel. Eight people shared journey literally.
Summer of Love represented counterculture explosion. The Bus carried hippies to festivals. It was symbol of communal values.
Original 1967 owners got vehicle perfectly suited to their lifestyle. The Bus enabled Summer of Love.
Gen X recognized 1967 Buses as representing the vehicle at absolute cultural significance.
Today's collectors appreciate 1967 as representing the Bus at peak counterculture moment.
Demand reached new levels as counterculture adoption drove sales.
The 1967 Microbus Kombi was becoming counterculture icon. Summer of Love (arrived that year). Haight-Ashbury filling with Buses. Communes forming using Buses for mobile living and supply transport. The eight-passenger capacity enabled collective living: move commune members, haul supplies for alternative communities, transport groups to protests and gatherings. The Bus represented permission mobile: permission to drop out (drive away from establishment), permission to live collectively (eight people sharing space and journey), permission to travel freely (reliable transport enabling geographic liberation from conventional settled living requiring property ownership and residential permanence).
The Microbus Kombi's engineering served counterculture values accidentally but perfectly: affordable (accessible to people rejecting high-paying establishment jobs), reliable (dependable for people living alternatively without dealer service access), owner-serviceable (maintainable by commune members sharing knowledge and tools), spacious (enabling collective living and group travel), durable (lasting for people who couldn't afford frequent replacement), simple (understandable engineering for people valuing transparency and rejecting corporate complexity). Every engineering characteristic aligned with values counterculture was articulating: reject planned obsolescence, embrace simplicity, value collective over individual, enable community through shared resources and mutual support.
The Bus wasn't marketed to counterculture—it was adopted by counterculture recognizing the vehicle embodied movement values through honest engineering maintained since 1950. That organic adoption through authentic values alignment made the Bus genuine cultural symbol rather than manufactured demographic marketing construct. The 1967 Microbus Kombi was participant in cultural transformation, not observer of market opportunity. That authentic participation makes these specimens historically and culturally significant beyond their transportation function.