I’m a huge fan of cheese. Hey, not all of my paychecks go toward rent and the care and feeding of depreciated European automobiles. As a mid-afternoon pick-me-up, there’s nothing like a bit of aged cheddar or a baked brie or some lovely Oaxaca, especially when served with crackers and grapes and consumed within view of a beloved car.
Cheese, however, is a fairly expensive hobby. Certainly not by the standards of premier cru wine or private flight, but it can definitely be pricier than film photography if you aren’t careful. Don’t believe me? Check this out:


A user by the name of Andrew McCalip on the social media network formerly known as Twitter posted a fascinating bar graph comparing the prices of cars per pound against the prices of various cheeses per pound, and the results were enough to stop us in our tracks.
Since we’re talking manufacturing this week…
I think a lot about the price of cheese vs vehicles per pound pic.twitter.com/QWyAVdbQvs
— Andrew McCalip (@andrewmccalip) April 12, 2025
A bar graph is a great visual, but there’s room here to really get into the nitty-gritty, so let’s break a few cars and cheeses down to actual dollars and pounds, and see where the value lies.
Porsche 911 Carrera

With a starting price of $129,950 including freight and a base curb weight of 3,424 pounds, the latest 911 Carrera works out to $37.95 per pound. Admittedly, high-end sports cars are going to fare better against cheese in this price-per-weight metric because they pride themselves on reasonable curb weight, but that’s just the nature of the game, and a comparable cheese may be a whole lot cheaper by mass.
Roquefort

You know, something like a Roquefort. Canadians of a certain age know this cheese thanks to Bran Van 3000’s hit “Drinking In L.A.,” but this sheep-milk blue cheese is something special. It’s actually geographically protected, being exclusively aged in the Combalau caves of Roquefort-sur-Soulzon. For example, if you’re craving Roquefort Societe Bee from Gourmet Food Store, you’re looking at paying $31.09 per pound. Now that’s some premium dairy, costing more by weight than one of the world’s leading luxury sedans.
Mercedes-Benz S 500

Ah, the S-Class. Transport of choice for plutocrats and heads of state for generations. While you can option it up to be a bit garish with Magic City ambient lighting and carbon fiber trim, there’s still something so right about a base S 500 with proper woodgrain on the dashboard. With a base price of $119,100 including freight and a curb weight of 4,784 pounds, it works out to $24.89 per pound.
Gorgonzola

Here’s another cheese that’s fun to say. Gorgonzola’s the cheese that made Italy reek, and gorgonzola piccante is the firmer, sharper counterpart to the soft gorgonzola dolce. If you want a pound of that crumbly stuff, it’s gonna cost you $21.74. A delicacy to be enjoyed every now and then, but if you don’t have a solitary living situation, those around you might want to keep it rare.
Chevrolet Corvette

God help me, I’ve got myself a race car. Alright, so there are a few steps in between a standard Corvette and a C8.R endurance racer, but America’s sports car should do fairly well at this game because it’s ever so slightly on the tubby side of the sports car segment and solid value for what you get. At a base price of $70,195 including freight and a curb weight of 3,535 pounds, you’re looking at $19.85 per pound of Corvette. Yeehaw.
Fontina Tedesco

Looking for something to elevate your French onion soup? How about a Belgian-style Fontina? It’s a smooth, semi-sweet melter perfect for applications like fondue, and I wouldn’t be surprised if it worked on pizza too. This particular Fontina Tedesco will run you $18.99 per pound, making it a bit cheaper than a Corvette by weight, but still a somewhat pricey culinary proposition. Actually, there’s a flagship luxury sedan that’s arguably a better value.
Lucid Air Pure

Nearly five years after the public first saw the Lucid Air, it’s still one of the best-looking sedans on sale. Sure, the A-pillar blind spot is huge, but in a world of jellybeans and monsters with overwrought grilles, there’s a certain elegance to the Air. The base Pure trim is fantastic too, giving up standard rear-wheel-drive for a perfectly manageable amount of power and a reasonable base price of $71,400 including freight. With a curb weight of 4,564 pounds, that works out to $15.64 per pound. Not bad, but we can go cheaper.
Smoked Gouda

What’s Gouda, my man? Well, it’s a firm Dutch cheese that pairs well with beer and develops an interesting caramel-like note as it ages. Now, young gouda doesn’t do that, instead being slightly nutty, which is why I prefer my mass-market gouda smoked. It goes great on a grilled bratwurst, although it’ll run you a bit of coin if you’re in America. This particular variety retails for $13.16 per pound.
Toyota GR86

The Toyota GR86 is still one hell of a deal. I mean, here’s a rear-wheel-drive 2+2 coupe with a manual gearbox and a limited-slip differential for $31,135 including freight, and it’s a world-class driver’s car that feels like a reincarnated Porsche 944. Part of that nimbleness is thanks to a curb weight of 2,833 pounds, meaning this everyday sports coupe works out to $10.99 per pound. Now that’s a damn good deal.
Paneer

I don’t want to be the one to tell you this, but your mozzarella sticks are pretty boring. Sure, the melt of the mozza inside the breading is textbook and they are the official food of ska-punk, but if you really want to spice up your next potluck, pick up some paneer. This South Asian non-aged soft cheese is the platonic ideal of spice-it-bread-it-and-deep-fry-it, partly because it’ll soften without melting and partly because it provides fantastic contrast to crispy breading while still maintaining structural integrity. Walmart’s selling an eight-ounce pack for $5, which means a pound will run you $10. Find a paneer pakora recipe, get yourself some decent chutney, and get ready to blow some minds.
Nissan Versa S

Can we go cheaper than $10 per pound? Of course we can. Take the cheapest 2025 model year car on sale in America, the Nissan Versa S. It starts at a mere $19,470 including freight, and with a curb weight of 2,598 pounds, this subcompact sedan works out to $7.49 per pound. Yeah, that’s cheap. Best of all, it’s a new car with a warranty, port injection, natural aspiration, and a row-your-own five-speed manual transmission, meaning it’ll get you where you need to go no problem.
Cheddar

Mind you, the Versa S has nothing on mass-market cheddar. Sure, pricier varieties exist, such as delectably sharp two-year aged cheddar or Applewood smoked cheddar, but we aren’t talking about those. You can get a one-pound block of sharp cheddar for $4.43 at Walmart, which feels like a damn good deal. Shred it or slice it, put it on burgers and over salads, eat it as a snack, it gets the job done. Even more so than pizza, all cheese is good cheese.
So what have we learned here? Well, cheese is expensive by weight, but we already knew that. Perhaps in the context of cheese, cars are actually cheaper than we expected. The C8 Corvette certainly seems worth its weight in gorgonzola, and I’d take a GR86 in the garage over smoked gouda, at least at U.S. pricing. While it’ll take ages for a cheese habit to catch up with the price of a new sports car, that day might eventually come. Priorities, right?
Hat tip to the Odd Lots Discord. Top graphic images: Chevrolet; depositphotos.com
Support our mission of championing car culture by becoming an Official Autopian Member.
-
The Opel Kapitän’s Wafers Have A Surprising Secret: Cold Start
-
Report On Fastest Growing Brands For 2022 Might Be Bullshit But Here’s A ‘Great Value’ Cream Cheese-Themed Mitsubishi Mirage Anyway
-
Auto Tariffs Starting To Wreak Havoc On The Car Industry As Ineos, Ferrari Hike Prices And Chrysler Temporarily Lays Off Thousands
Please send tips about cool car things to tips@theautopian.com. You could even win a prize!
I have been trying to like smoked Gouda forever and I just can’t, I’m sorry. I tried!
However, I can and do heartily recommend this amazing, versatile cheddar: https://www.fordfarm.com/coastal-cheddar/
I think it’s usually $6/lb at Costco. It’s flavorful enough for charcuterie, it has amazing texture with the protein crystals, it crumbles but! can also be shredded successfully for a melt that works from nachos to rice & beans to rich breakfasts (eggs, breakfast sandwiches, etc).
I see you didn’t work your way down to Velveeta cheese food product. Surely there’s a car that qualifies as a car-like product.
The Mitsubishi Mirage is the cheese food of cars.
G-Wiz
The ChangLi
All of our road vehicles were bought for less than $1/lb, but our tractor cost around the same as Bandon Cheddar, which runs $4.50/lb on sale. I don’t know what that says about our priorities.
To continue the off-topic shenanigans into the sports world:
The roster of the LA Dodgers baseball team weighs around 5,500lbs, equivalent to one Chevrolet Tahoe. Their payroll per game is ~$2,050,000. That’s $373 per pound, per game. Roughly $60,000 per pound for the entire season.
A significant amount of cheddar.
Is this Autopian or Wallace and Gromit?
Yes. Yes it is.
So as a cheese aficionado and tech geek I found this site years ago: cheese.com
All sorts of information about cheeses and when I need to test someone’s internet connection/DNS I use that site since I can pretty much guarantee no one is browsing to it regularly.
Now then, what cheese is best for eating while driving one of these fancy vehicles?
So for the price of my 2-series Bimmer, I could have come home with 3500 lbs of smoked gouda? I’ll have to factor that sort of thing into my next car purchase.
I have a new “neither” option for Shitbox Showdown: I’ll take the cheese today.
now that would be a proper shitbox showdown.
can I drive a pound of roquefort down to race wars though?
Whelp, looks like scrap steel is under 10 cents a pound here. I’m offered $400 or so for a totaled Pontiac Vibe (includes towing). I can buy about 70 pounds of cheese at Aldi.
Two things I don’t shop by the pound, cars & hookers.
Hey, that sexy Lincoln Mark V is calling your name, tiger.
Honestly, these all pretty reasonable cheese prices. The good stuff here (in WI) runs ~$200/lb for 20-year aged cheddar.
That’s the sweet spot right there – I want my dairy products old enough to vote but not old enough to drink.
For real. Leave it to some pleb on Twitter to completely miss the high end: https://www.forbes.com/sites/brianroberts/2018/02/18/most-expensive-cheeses-in-the-world/?sh=2107982a1447
Eating Pule out of one of those bespoke Rolls-Royce picnic kits would fix me.
Apparently my 2021 F250 is worth very close to its weight in Kraft Singles, but only if bought from a bougie store like my neighborhood Publix. My truck would be a hell of a deal if bought in its weight in Kraft Singles from Wal-Mart (40% below KBB value!).
Part of my brain thinks I have found an opportunity for processed cheese arbitrage. The smarter part of my brain thinks I need to find a new damn grocery store.
When I first started a career as a chef, I worked for a company that had me take a number of cheesemonger’s courses. Young and arrogant, I went into it think I knew a lot about cheese, I realized pretty quickly that I knew nothing. France may only have 42 actual types of cheese varieties, but they have over 1,300 on sale in any given day and it’s crazy to think someone could know them all. It’s an amazing world, cheese.
I’d recommend you try some Haloumi. It’s a sheep’s milk cheese from Cyprus that you can sear, grill, or just throw straight into a fryer and it creates a crispy shell on the ouside while it’s soft, salty and amazing on the inside. You can’t eat much of it (I can’t undertsate the salty), but a couple of slices on a griddle with a little olive oil and a slice of tomato is revelatory
I’ve had Haloumi and it’s divine!
It’s the perfect cheese for venturing out into the broader world of what cheese can be. There’s enough familiar in it to make it comfortable, but it’s different enough that you’re experiencing something new
Cheeses are like wines for me. I know what I like but my skill level stops at correctly differentiating red, white and pink.
Years ago I had some amazing goat cheese from St Pierre and Miquelon that a workmate brought for me from his fathers farm there. Blew my mind. Unfortunately I cannot remember the name.
Was it shaped like a pyramid? That’s the only one I can think of from there off the top of my head, but they make a lot of goat cheese there
No memory, it was 35 years in the past. It stuck in my head because it was so good.
This is why I read the autopian.
Now the real question is wine prices vs car prices in $/liters.
Hell yeah. That backseat wine chiller on the super-high-end boiz ain’t gonna fill itself.
ATTENTION: EVERYONE. I have seen the chart. It escaped containment from Bad Fascist Takes Dot Com onto more reasonable corners of the internet. I even shared it on The Autopian’s Discord! You do not need to tag me in the chart when it’s reposted on a website or chat app that’s still worth using. You do, however, need to send me the Rolls-Royce of cheeses.
Thank you for your cooperation in this matter and I look forward to eating the cheese.
Paneer, huh? Thanks.
Also why isn’t there a website where you can tell it year/make/model and have it output the MSRP cost per pound–and then manually enter the price you paid for used cars? Somebody get on that so I can justify my “investment.”
My vehicle is somewhere in that government cheddar bracket. Maybe someday I’ll get something in the Cabot NY Extra Sharp range.
Gesundheit. 🙂
My problem with cheese is that some are delightful and some are awful, and it’s almost impossible to tell the difference on sight.
And at the risk of upsetting the cheese snobs, it looks like Velveeta is going for about $4/lb right now at my local grocery store. 😉
I’m a total cheese snob and I’ll tell you right now Velveeta rules. Anyone who says otherwise is wrong
Nothing melts like Velveeta.
Pound of Velveeta, 1/2 cup of milk and half a bag of this:
https://salsaelgallo.com/products/red-homestyle-salsa
Best queso
Now I need to buy a Porsche and fill it with brie just to show off my wealth.
I’d say epoisses is more fitting, but please do not stink up a good 911 like that. (That’s a delightfully funky boi.)
Now I want to eat a bunch cheese.
Same. I’m hungry now.
Cheesy articles are the backbone of this website. Thank you, Thomas, for your service.
This has been living in my head rent free for decades. Cheese glorious cheese…
Ahhh, the power of cheese. I’m hungry.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mKp0iDZ9a_s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OUt5GP5Rypo
This is why I’m a member.
This is why I’m a Camembert.