Decode Your VIN
Enter your vehicle's VIN code to discover all technical specifications. The VIN consists of 17 alphanumeric characters.
Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN Decoder: Free Lookup
Want to decode your Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN? You’re in the right place, and it’s completely free. Just type the 17-character vehicle identification number from your 300 into the box above and you’ll get the make, model variant, year, engine family, transmission, trim level, factory options and assembly-plant data in seconds. No sign-up, no email needed.
About the Mercedes-Benz 300
The Mercedes-Benz 300 nameplate spans four decades, from the 1951 Adenauer 300 to the 300E and 300SD of the 1990s. It was produced from 1951 to 1995 (various), and you’ll find it as a Sedan, Coupe, Cabriolet (W186, W189, W126, W124, W140 etc.). Assembly happened at: Sindelfingen and Bremen, Germany.
On pre-1981 300 models the VIN is shorter than 17 characters. That's because the unified VIN standard wasn't introduced until 1981. Vehicles built from 1981 onwards use the standardized 17-character format you're used to seeing today.
A few things worth knowing about the 300
The 1954 300SL 'Gullwing' (W198) was the world's first production car with fuel injection and is among the most valuable Mercedes-Benz models, recent auction prices for matching-numbers examples have exceeded US$1.5 million. The 1991 300CE Cabriolet was the first four-seat Mercedes convertible since the 1971 280SE 3.5 Cabriolet.
How to decode a Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN
Every Mercedes-Benz VIN built since 1981 follows the ISO 3779 standard. That gives you 17 alphanumeric characters split into three blocks: the World Manufacturer Identifier (positions 1 to 3), the Vehicle Descriptor Section (positions 4 to 9) and the Vehicle Identifier Section (positions 10 to 17). Here’s what each chunk tells you about your 300.
Positions 1 to 3: World Manufacturer Identifier (WMI)
WDB is the typical WMI prefix; pre-1981 vehicles predate the 17-character VIN standard.
Positions 4 to 8: Vehicle Descriptor Section (VDS)
W186, W189, W126, W124 and W140 chassis codes appear across the 300 family in VDS positions 4 to 8.
Position 9: Check Digit
The check digit comes from a weighted sum of the other 16 characters. Think of it as a self-validating control. If you mistype any single character on your 300 VIN, the check digit won’t match and the VIN is flagged as invalid.
Position 10: Model Year
Position 10 tells you the model year using a rolling alphanumeric scheme. A quick Mercedes-Benz cheat sheet: S = 1995, Y = 2000, 5 = 2005, A = 2010, F = 2015, L = 2020, P = 2023, R = 2024, S = 2025, T = 2026.
Position 11: Assembly Plant
Position 11 is typically 'F' (Bremen) or 'A' (Sindelfingen, Germany).
Positions 12 to 17: Production Sequence Number
The final six digits are the unique serial number stamped on your specific 300 as it rolled off the assembly line.
Mercedes-Benz 300 engine codes
Over the years the 300 has been offered with the following engine families: M186 inline-six (Adenauer), M103, M104 inline-six, OM603, OM606 diesel inline-six. Mercedes-Benz engine codes follow a tight naming convention. The letter ‘M‘ denotes a petrol/gasoline engine (think M256, M177, M139), while ‘OM‘ (Oel-Motor) flags a diesel (OM651, OM654, OM656 and so on). Want to know exactly which engine sits under your 300? Decode the VIN above. VDS positions 4 to 8 will give you the exact engine variant.
300 VIN quick reference
Here’s the at-a-glance reference for decoding any Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN:
- Production years: 1951 to 1995 (various)
- Body styles: Sedan, Coupe, Cabriolet (W186, W189, W126, W124, W140 etc.)
- Primary assembly: Sindelfingen and Bremen, Germany
- WMI prefix: WDB is the typical WMI prefix; pre-1981 vehicles predate the 17-character VIN standard.
- Chassis identifier (VDS): W186, W189, W126, W124 and W140 chassis codes appear across the 300 family in VDS positions 4 to 8.
- Plant code (position 11): Position 11 is typically 'F' (Bremen) or 'A' (Sindelfingen, Germany).
- Engine families: M186 inline-six (Adenauer), M103, M104 inline-six, OM603, OM606 diesel inline-six
- Trim levels offered: 300S, 300SL Gullwing, 300SE, 300D, 300SD, 300E, 300CE, 300TE
Mercedes-Benz 300 trim levels and variants
Across its run the 300 has shown up in these trim levels: 300S, 300SL Gullwing, 300SE, 300D, 300SD, 300E, 300CE, 300TE. Every trim leaves a fingerprint inside the VIN’s VDS section. Decoding your VIN doesn’t just confirm the trim level. It also surfaces the original factory option packages (AMG Line, Premium, Driver Assistance, Burmester audio, the lot), and that’s the stuff that really matters when you’re checking resale value.
Recall and safety information for the Mercedes-Benz 300
Open and historic recalls on the 300 are tracked by NHTSA in the USA, by the European Commission’s RAPEX system in the EU, and by individual national transport authorities elsewhere. Once you’ve decoded your 300 VIN above, copy the 17 characters into any of these databases to check for outstanding safety actions. On modern Mercedes-Benz cars the usual suspects are airbag inflators, fuel-system seals, electric power steering and occupant-classification software.
Why use VinDecoderPlus for your 300?
You’ll get a free instant decode of any Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN with VinDecoderPlus. No sign-up, no email, no credit card. The data comes from NHTSA’s vPIC database (the official US government VIN registry) and is cross-referenced with manufacturer specifications. If you want to dig deeper into ownership records, accident reports, title brands or odometer history, you can upgrade to a full vehicle history report directly from the results page.
Frequently asked questions
How do I decode my Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN?
Type the 17-character VIN from your 300’s windshield, driver-side door jamb, or vehicle title into the VinDecoderPlus tool above. Because the 300 was produced from 1951 to 1995 (various) as a sedan, coupe, cabriolet (w186, w189, w126, w124, w140 etc.), the decoder returns model-year-appropriate data, including the engine variant from the M186 inline-six (Adenauer) family. The information comes straight from NHTSA’s vPIC database and Mercedes-Benz build records.
Where is the VIN located on a Mercedes-Benz 300?
On a 300 you’ll find the VIN in four places. First, on the lower-left corner of the windshield, where it’s visible from outside the car. Second, on a sticker inside the driver’s-side door jamb. Third, stamped into the engine firewall or chassis rail (this is typical for sedan bodies). And fourth, printed on the vehicle title, registration and insurance card. On the 300, the door-jamb sticker is also where you’ll see the original tire and load specification.
What engines were offered in the Mercedes-Benz 300?
The Mercedes-Benz 300 has been offered with these engine families: M186 inline-six (Adenauer), M103, M104 inline-six, OM603, OM606 diesel inline-six. The specific engine installed in your particular 300 is encoded in VDS positions 4 to 8 of the VIN. You can confirm the exact displacement, output and aspiration once you decode the VIN above.
Where was the Mercedes-Benz 300 built?
The 300 is mainly assembled at: Sindelfingen and Bremen, Germany. Position 11 is typically ‘F’ (Bremen) or ‘A’ (Sindelfingen, Germany). Why does it matter where your car was built? Parts compatibility. European-spec and North-American-spec 300 variants sometimes differ in lighting, emissions equipment and OBD-II reporting standards, even when they share the same chassis code.
How can I check open recalls on my Mercedes-Benz 300?
Once you’ve decoded your 300 VIN above, copy the 17 characters into the NHTSA recall database (USA), the EU RAPEX system, or the Mercedes-Benz owner portal. Since the 300 was produced from 1951 to 1995 (various), you may also bump into historic technical service bulletins (TSBs). Those aren’t safety recalls, but they do give you useful maintenance guidance for your specific chassis code.
What trim levels are available for the Mercedes-Benz 300?
Across its run, the 300 has been offered in: 300S, 300SL Gullwing, 300SE, 300D, 300SD, 300E, 300CE, 300TE. Each trim leaves its fingerprint inside the VIN’s VDS section. The 1954 300SL ‘Gullwing’ (W198) was the world’s first production car with fuel injection and is among the most valuable Mercedes-Benz models, recent auction prices for matching-numbers examples have exceeded US$1.
Is the Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN decoder really free?
Yes. VinDecoderPlus is a completely free decoder for every Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN. No sign-up, no credit card, no usage limit. If you want the deeper stuff (ownership records, accident history, title brand) for the 300, full vehicle history reports are available as an optional paid upgrade from the results page.
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Ready to decode? Type your 17-character Mercedes-Benz 300 VIN into the decoder above and get your results instantly. Or head to our free VIN decoder homepage to decode any other vehicle.
