The 2018 G65 AMG is the swan song of Mercedes' hand-built 6.0L twin-turbo V12 in a body-on-frame off-roader—a $220k+ engineering indulgence with phenomenal performance but catastrophic repair costs when the M279 engine grenades, which it does with alarming regularity under stress or deferred maintenance.
M279 V12 Catastrophic Engine Failure (Rod Bearing / Piston Failure)
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: Metallic knocking or ticking from lower engine block, especially cold start, Oil pressure fluctuation or low pressure warning at idle, Metal shavings in oil during analysis, Sudden loss of power followed by check engine light and limp mode, Catastrophic failure: violent noise, seized engine, oil starvation
Fix: This is the nightmare scenario. Rod bearing wear accelerates rapidly in high-performance use or extended oil intervals. Once bearing material breaks down, you're looking at complete engine-out rebuild or replacement. Factory reman long block runs $60k-80k in parts alone; independent rebuild with machine work, pistons, bearings, gaskets is 80-120 hours labor. Many owners opt for used engines from low-mileage wrecks at $30k-50k plus 40-50 hours swap time. No shortcuts—this is a hand-built AMG V12.
Estimated cost: $45,000-95,000
Transmission Oil Cooler Failure (722.9 Seven-Speed)
Common · high severityTypical onset: 50,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission fluid mixing with coolant (strawberry milkshake in reservoir), Harsh shifting or delayed engagement after warm-up, Transmission overheating warnings on dash, Coolant loss with no external leaks visible, Check engine light with transmission temperature codes
Fix: The internal trans cooler in the radiator develops cracks, allowing coolant and ATF to cross-contaminate. This kills the transmission if not caught early. Repair requires radiator replacement, full transmission fluid flush (minimum 3-4 cycles with fresh MB 236.14 fluid), often new torque converter, and filter. If contamination sat for any length of time, expect internal clutch pack damage requiring trans rebuild. Caught early: 6-8 hours. Full trans rebuild adds 18-25 hours. Replace with external cooler setup to prevent recurrence.
Estimated cost: $3,500-6,500 (early) / $12,000-18,000 (with trans rebuild)
Turbocharger Wastegate Rattle and Boost Control Issues
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 35,000-70,000 mi
Symptoms: Rattling noise on cold start or light throttle (wastegate actuator rod play), Limp mode with underboost or overboost fault codes (P0234, P0299), Inconsistent power delivery, surge during acceleration, Excessive black smoke under hard acceleration, Turbo whistle or whooshing sounds at idle
Fix: The M279 uses small twin turbos that run extremely hot. Wastegate actuator arms develop play, and diaphragms fail. Carbon buildup on wastegate flaps causes binding. Repair requires removing both turbos (engine-out or extremely tight engine-in work), rebuilding or replacing actuators, cleaning or replacing wastegate assemblies. OEM turbos are $4k-6k each; quality rebuilds $2k-3k each. Labor is 16-22 hours due to packaging—everything is buried. Some shops go straight to upgraded actuators to prevent repeat failure.
Estimated cost: $8,000-16,000
Fuel System Carbon Buildup and Injector Failure
Occasional · medium severityTypical onset: 60,000-100,000 mi
Symptoms: Rough idle, misfires on multiple cylinders, Loss of power, hesitation on acceleration, Check engine light with lean/rich mixture codes or misfire codes, Hard starting when engine is hot, Fuel smell from engine bay or excessive fuel consumption
Fix: Direct injection engines carbon-load the intake valves since no fuel washes them. The M279 also suffers injector seal leaks and clogged injectors. Walnut blasting both cylinder heads: 8-12 hours. Injector replacement (all 12 recommended when one fails): $3k-5k in parts, 6-8 hours labor. Add another 4-6 hours if you're doing intake manifold removal for proper valve cleaning. Use top-tier fuel and occasional Italian tune-up to slow buildup, but it's inevitable.
Estimated cost: $4,500-9,000
Transmission Mounts and Subframe Mounts Deterioration
Common · low severityTypical onset: 40,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunk or thud on shifts, especially reverse to drive, Vibration through chassis at idle in gear, Excessive drivetrain movement visible during throttle blips, Steering wheel or shifter vibration at highway speeds
Fix: The G-Wagen's body-on-frame design puts huge stress on transmission and subframe mounts, especially with 738 lb-ft of V12 torque. Hydraulic mounts fail, allowing excessive movement. Front trans mount: 2-3 hours. Rear trans mount: 3-4 hours (exhaust removal). Subframe mounts: 6-8 hours (frame must be supported, crossmember dropped). Use OEM mounts only—aftermarket fails faster under this load. Budget for all mounts at once if one is bad; they age together.
Estimated cost: $2,200-4,500
Fuel Filter Clogging and High-Pressure Pump Wear
Occasional · medium severityTypical onset: 50,000-90,000 mi
Symptoms: Long crank time before engine fires, Sputtering or loss of power under hard acceleration, Limp mode with low fuel pressure codes (P0087), Engine dying at idle after deceleration, Fuel pump whine audible from rear of vehicle
Fix: The V12 has both in-tank low-pressure pump and chassis-mounted high-pressure pump. Filter sits inline and clogs with ethanol fuel deposits. Filter replacement: 1.5-2 hours, $150-300 in parts. High-pressure pump failure: 4-6 hours, $1,200-2,000 in parts. In-tank pump: 3-4 hours, $600-900. Mercedes spec is 20k mile filter changes; real-world ethanol fuel means 15k max. Failure to maintain kills the high-pressure pump, which then sends debris downstream to injectors.
Estimated cost: $800-3,500
Only buy if you have a $20k annual repair budget and accept that a $50k+ engine failure is a when-not-if proposition—spectacular to own, ruinous to maintain, best left to those who can afford disposable exotics.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.