Dean

Since 1977

Dean Guitars is a Florida-based builder known for angular ML/V/Z shapes, artist-driven signatures, and metal-forward tones that span entry Vendetta lines to USA Custom Shop instruments.

49

Years in Business

3M+

Guitars Sold

$180M

Annual Revenue

Dean Guitar

Complete Dean Guitar Guide

Comprehensive buying guide, price analysis, model comparisons, and expert insights to help you understand everything about Dean guitars.

Dean Price Overview

Dean covers a wide range of instruments from entry-level to professional models. Typical used prices vary by condition, series and year. Higher-end USA models and limited editions retain value better than mass-market lines, while rare or vintage pieces often command significant premiums.

When evaluating value, consider originality (pickups, hardware), structural condition (neck, frets, finish) and documentation (serials, receipts, setup reports). Price dispersion across platforms is common; local stores offer service and inspection, whereas online marketplaces provide broader selection and price transparency.

For detailed buying advice, model comparisons and condition-based pricing, read the full guide linked above.

Market Overview

Average Price

$950

+5% vs last year

eBay Listings

1,300

Active listings

Sold This Month

520

+3% vs last month

Price Range

$250-$3,000

Current market range

Data sourced from eBay, Reverb, and Guitar Center used listings

Dean Timeline

1977

Founded in Chicago

Dean Zelinsky launches Dean with the ML shape that pairs Explorer and V geometry.

1980

ML & V gain stage traction

Metal players adopt the angular shapes; Dimebag Darrell brings ML onto arena stages.

1997

Armadillo acquisition

Armadillo Enterprises purchases Dean and later relocates HQ to Tampa, Florida.

2017

40th anniversary editions

Limited ML, V, Z, and Cadillac runs celebrate four decades of the brand.

2019

Artist roster expands

Kerry King collaboration signals renewed focus on signature metal instruments.

2024

Select & Exile refresh

Select series updates add stainless frets, Fluence/USA pickups, and modern finishes.

Complete Dean Product Lineup

Dean leans on radical ML/V/Z shapes, hot pickups, and artist collabs to keep stage presence high from value lines to USA customs.

Iconic Shapes

Classic Dean silhouettes built for metal stages.

ML 79 / Select
V Select
Z
Cadillac

Modern Shred

Fast necks, hotter pickups, and contemporary bridges.

Exile Select
Nashvegas
Icon Select

Singlecut & Workhorse

Set-neck sustain with versatile voicings for rock.

Thoroughbred
Gran Sport
Icon Flame Top

Entry & Value

Budget-friendly builds that keep the Dean silhouette.

Vendetta XM
Custom Zone
Zero Select

Signature & USA

Artist-spec instruments and USA shop runs.

Dave Mustaine VMNT
Dimebag Razorback/ML
USA Custom Shop ML
"Dean leans on radical ML/V/Z shapes, hot pickups, and artist collabs to keep stage presence high from value lines to USA customs."

Model-Specific Buying Guide

Each model has unique characteristics that affect both tone and value. Here's what to look for when buying specific models.

ML / Razorback

Pickups & voice

EMG/Fishman or DMT humbuckers define gain clarity; coil-splits on Selects broaden clean tones.

Bridge options

Floyd Rose vs. Tune-o-matic: decide on dive-bombs or maximum tuning stability for down-tuning.

Weight & balance

Large wings add mass—check strap balance and case fit; verify neck relief after shipping.

V Select

Neck feel

Thin-C carves with jumbo frets; inspect fret ends and nut height for low-action metal setups.

Electronics

USA DMT or Fishman Fluence sets push midrange bite—confirm quiet coil taps if present.

Hardware check

Grover tuners and TOM bridges need tight posts; confirm V-case compatibility for transport.

Thoroughbred / Cadillac

Set-neck sustain

Set-neck/mahogany builds give thick mids—compare maple-cap vs. all-mahogany for brightness.

Pickup voicing

DMT/USA or Seymour Duncan sets cover classic rock; check coil-split wiring for hum control.

Weight & comfort

Singlecuts can be heavy—verify strap button placement and contouring for long gigs.

Exile / Icon Select

Modern specs

Stainless frets, 16" radius, and fast necks favor shred; ensure factory setup suits your tuning.

Multiscale & scale

Some Exile runs add longer scale—check intonation and bridge alignment after shipping.

Noise floor

High-output sets need clean grounding; listen for hum with gain and adjust pickup height.

Vendetta / Custom Zone (Entry)

Setup matters

Budget builds improve with a pro setup—nut slots and fret ends often need attention.

Bridge & tuning

Hardtail bridges stay stable; if trem-equipped, set spring tension for your gauge/tuning.

Upgrade path

Stock electronics are serviceable—budget for pickup swap if chasing tighter high-gain clarity.