1966 Fender Jaguar

The 1966 CBS-era Jaguar is an accessible vintage offset guitar. The large CBS headstock is present; otherwise the guitar retains its complex switching and floating tremolo.

Current Market Value

Excellent
$8,000$18,000
Very Good
$4,400$10,800
Good
$2,800$7,200
Fair
$1,200$3,600

* Prices are estimates based on recent market data. Actual value depends on originality, condition, and provenance. Pricing methodology

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Recent Sales

Fender Jaguar 1966 - Charcoal Frost Metallic w/ Matching Headstock
Very Good1 month agoreverb
Fender Jaguar 1966 Candy Apple Red
Very Good1 month agoreverb
Fender 1966 Jaguar Car Electric Guitar Rare Vintage Model
Good1 month agoreverb
Fender 1966 Jaguar, Lake Placid Blue
Very Good1 month agoreverb
Fender Jaguar 1966 - Candy Apple red
Excellent1 month agoreverb
Fender 1966 Jaguar Blonde
Very Good1 month agoreverb
1966 Fender Jaguar olympic white
Very Good1 month agoreverb
Fender 1966 Jaguar Electric Guitar Vintage Model
Good1 month agoreverb
Fender Jaguar Candy Apple Red 1966
Very Good1 month agoreverb
Vintage 1966 Fender Jaguar in Black original finish, listing updated 2/14/24
Very Good1 month agoreverb

Showing 10 verified sales for 1966 Fender Jaguar. Reissues, replicas, and parts listings are filtered out.

Specifications

Body WoodAlder
Neck WoodMaple
FingerboardRosewood
Scale Length24.000"
Frets22
Pickup ConfigSS
BridgeFloating tremolo with Jaguar vibrato
TunersF-stamped (CBS era)
Finish OptionsSunburst, Custom Colors

Pickups & Electronics

Two Jaguar single-coil pickups. CBS-era production.

Collector's Notes

Custom Colors on CBS-era Jaguars are still highly collectible. The Jaguar market has strengthened as offset guitars have gained mainstream appeal.

How to Authenticate a 1966 Fender Jaguar

Check the serial number on the neck plate (or headstock for later models). Fender serial numbers were not strictly sequential — the neck date stamp (penciled on heel) and body date stamp (neck pocket) are more reliable for precise dating. The neck date stamp (penciled on the heel, visible when the neck is removed) is the single most reliable dating method for Fender guitars. Body dates in the neck pocket or under the pickguard corroborate. Pot codes should read 304 (Stackpole) or 140 (CTS) followed by date codes from 1965-1966. Pots should predate the guitar by no more than 12-18 months. The finish should be nitrocellulose lacquer — under UV/blacklight, original nitro fluoresces differently than modern polyester or polyurethane. Nitro finishes check (develop fine cracks) and wear naturally. Refinished guitars often have a too-perfect look. Veneer (round-laminated) rosewood fingerboard — thinner than slab-cut. Round-lam boards are curved on the bottom. Transition era — gold transition logo (some models). Some CBS changes but many pre-CBS features remain. Short 24-inch scale. Distinctive chrome control plates with multiple switches. Two single-coil pickups with metal surrounds. Mute pad on bridge. Verify all switching and chrome components. Check for replaced tuners (original F-stamped (CBS era) should be present), refrets, body routing modifications, and any filled screw holes. Original custom color finishes are verified by examining color in pickup cavities and under the pickguard. Original case adds provenance value.