Want to Own the Jaguar Hearse from Harold and Maude? It May Be Heading to Auction

Apr 21, 2026 | 0 comments

Gail in Jaguar Hearse

Gail Rubin in the driver’s seat of this Jaguar hearse recreation from the film Harold and Maude.

The Jaguar hearse from Harold and Maude could be yours!

Nearly ten years ago, I wrote about one of the most unusual vehicles ever created: a painstaking recreation of the Jaguar hearse driven by Harold in the cult classic Harold and Maude.

At the time, car enthusiast Ken Roberts was showing off the results of a multi-year project to rebuild a vehicle that, technically, no longer existed. The original Jaguar hearse used in the 1971 film was destroyed in its unforgettable cliffside finale. What remained were film stills, fan fascination, and one man’s determination to bring it back to life. Watch the video with the details!

Now, a decade later, that one-of-a-kind recreation may soon be heading to auction.

Recreation of the Jaguar Hearse from Harold and Maude

A Labor of Love (and Obsession)

Roberts’ recreation wasn’t a simple tribute build. It was an exercise in cinematic archaeology.

Using dozens of film stills, careful measurements, and creative engineering, he transformed a 1967 Jaguar XKE 2+2 into the hearse Harold made famous. The process took over three years and required blending parts from multiple vehicles to achieve the distinctive elongated rear and gothic silhouette.

The result? A car that is arguably even more functional than the original. This one has a working rear hatch, while the original vehicle did not.

Jaguar hearse license plate

Where the Car Is Now

I recently heard from Ken Roberts, who shared an update on the car’s current status:

“The Jaguar-Hearse is presently being restored to its original condition. The car is still a ‘Trailer Princess’ with only 650 miles on the odometer since it was completed in 2015.

I plan to show the car this summer and possibly take it to auction in the fall.”

Roberts has been downsizing his collection, reducing it from fifteen cars to seven. As part of that process, the Jaguar hearse, one of the most distinctive vehicles in his collection, may soon find a new home.

Possible Auction in 2026

If all goes according to plan, the car could appear at a Russo and Steele auction in Monterey, California during the prestigious August Monterey Car Week. It’s one of the premier venues for collector automobiles.

While details have not yet been publicly announced, the possibility raises an intriguing question:

What is a one-of-a-kind recreation of a destroyed film icon worth? The build receipts totaled $720K. The minimum bid at auction will be $250K.

Movie cars with strong provenance have fetched millions at auction. While this isn’t the original vehicle, it occupies a unique space: the only faithful recreation of a car that no longer exists.

Harold's Jaguar hearse

The Jaguar hearse in the film Harold and Maude.

Why This Car Still Matters

The Jaguar hearse from Harold and Maude has always been more than just a quirky movie prop.

It represents:

  • A rebellion against conventional attitudes toward death
  • A blending of humor and mortality
  • A deeply personal expression of identity

In many ways, it mirrors the growing death-positive movement: finding meaning, even joy, in conversations about mortality.

A Collector’s Dream or the Ultimate Final Ride?

Who might buy such a vehicle?

A film collector? A Jaguar enthusiast? A funeral professional with a flair for the unconventional?

Or perhaps someone who simply understands what Harold knew all along: that even in the presence of death, life can be lived boldly and with style. I’d buy it if I won a lottery jackpot.

Roberts added one final note in his message to me:

“Find me a buyer and I’ll pay you a commission!”

Tempting. Get in touch with me if you’re interested!

A Good Goodbye