1600cc
Air-cooled
The air-cooled flat-four engine that powered a generation. Code .
- Power
- N/A
- Fuel
- Carburetor
The air-cooled flat-four that powered the 1967 Notchback (Type 3). Simple, reliable, and endlessly modifiable.
1493cc (1.493L) Air-cooled 'pancake' flat-4
53 HP
Type 3
Station wagon
4-speed manual
Type 3 represented practical alternative.
All specifications should be verified before publication.
Refer to the specifications section above for the engine code used in the 1967 Type 3. 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 Type 3 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 Type 3 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 Type 3 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 Type 3 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 Type 3 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 Notchback (Type 3)
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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.
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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 Notchback (Type 3).
Three-box proportions. Clean lines. Minimal chrome.
Pancake engine proven. Dual trunks. Independent suspension.
Practical and comfortable.
Counterculture forming. Type 3 appealed to design-conscious buyers.
Original owners made intelligent choice.
Gen X appreciated overlooked design.
Today's collectors value practical innovation.
Type 3 production continuing.
The 1967 Notchback represented VW's sophisticated engineering advancement that market underappreciated but enthusiasts now recognize as innovation ahead of its time. The Notchback was traditional sedan proving VW could build conventional body style with unconventional engineering excellence. Trunk in front AND back (dual storage), air-cooled engine maintaining simplicity, four-door family practicality with German build quality. The Notchback served buyers wanting sedan familiarity with VW reliability. Market underappreciated it—most chose Beetle or American sedans. But the Notchback demonstrated VW versatility: they could build conventional AND maintain engineering sophistication simultaneously.
The Type 3 line demonstrated VW could innovate: pancake engine (flat-four laid horizontally enabling dual trunks front and back), independent rear suspension (more sophisticated than Beetle's swing axle on later models), available fuel injection (electronic D-Jetronic pioneering technology), refined interior (more upscale than Beetle without pretension), sophisticated styling (Ghia influence visible in proportions and details). Every aspect proved VW was engineering company capable of advancement while maintaining air-cooled simplicity, German quality, and honest design values.
The 1967 Notchback served buyers wanting sophistication without abandoning VW values: young professionals needing grown-up Beetle, young families requiring cargo space with continued German reliability, design-conscious buyers appreciating Ghia-influenced styling, technology enthusiasts valuing fuel injection innovation (on equipped models). The Type 3 proved you could advance sophistication while maintaining engineering integrity—exactly what Type 3 voice emphasizes: "Practicality and style can be the same impulse."
Original 1967 Type 3 buyers chose sophisticated innovation despite market indifference. They recognized what most missed: VW could build advanced vehicles maintaining German engineering excellence. The Type 3 wasn't compromise between Beetle and luxury—it was synthesis: Beetle reliability plus sophisticated advancement. Today's collectors recognize Type 3s as underappreciated innovators: vehicles proving VW's engineering breadth, demonstrating advancement within values, showing sophistication compatible with air-cooled honesty.
The Type 3 line (1961-1973) pioneered technologies that became automotive mainstream: hatchback cargo access (Fastback), practical wagon utility (Squareback), electronic fuel injection (D-Jetronic models from 1968), dual-trunk versatility (pancake engine enabling front and rear storage). Market underappreciated these innovations when new. Collectors appreciate them now as proof that VW was forward-thinking engineering company capable of sophisticated advancement while maintaining core values: air-cooled simplicity, German quality, honest design, owner-serviceability.
The 1967 Notchback represents Type 3's sophisticated practicality: engineering innovation serving real-world utility, styling advancement maintaining honest design, technology pioneering preserving mechanical accessibility. That combination—sophisticated innovation within consistent philosophy—makes Type 3s significant despite original market underappreciation. They proved practicality and sophistication weren't contradictory when engineering was intelligent and design was honest. That wisdom—advance while maintaining principles, innovate within philosophy, grow without abandoning identity—makes Type 3s philosophically significant beyond their underappreciated-when-new status.