Sell Your Ferrari 812 Competizione
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Selling a Ferrari 812 Competizione
Exotics Wanted acquires the Ferrari 812 Competizione directly from private owners nationwide. The Ferrari 812 Competizione is the terminal expression of Ferrari’s naturally aspirated V12 special series, with values appreciating 2x to 2.5x from the original MSRP of approximately $598,500 within three years of initial deliveries. Limited to 999 coupes and 599 Apertas, allocated exclusively through Ferrari’s invitation-only VIP client hierarchy, and confirmed by Ferrari’s own engineering leadership as the last of its kind, the Ferrari 812 Competizione anchors the specification-driven collector market where a single Tailor Made option can shift a transaction by six figures. The variant classifications below reflect the distinct market realities of the coupe and Aperta within this 1,598-unit production run.
The single most consequential detail in any Ferrari 812 Competizione transaction is the CCM-R brake health. The Competizione uses a Racing-designation carbon ceramic braking system with redesigned cooling architecture that is invisible to visual inspection. Disc wear percentage is measurable only through Ferrari’s DEIS diagnostic tools. A car without a current DEIS brake report faces a $25,000 to $35,000 corrective liability at the next authorized service visit, a cost not covered under Ferrari’s 7-year Genuine Maintenance program. A car with documented CCM-R health above 70% and confirmed Power16 warranty eligibility commands a me
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The Model
The Ferrari 812 Competizione
A 2.4x price spread currently separates the lowest recorded 812 Competizione coupe transaction from the highest public auction result. The variable is specification density: Tailor Made designation, collection theme, color rarity within the 999-unit run, and whether the commissioning client selected carbon fiber wheels, racing seats, and Scuderia shields or left them off the build sheet. Tailor Made examples command 15% to more than 30% above standard-spec equivalents. A standard Rosso Corsa coupe and a Prugna Opaco Scuderia commission with F1 driver engine signatures occupy the same chassis count but trade in entirely different value tiers.
Public aggregators flatten this into a single average, creating a suppressed market floor for owners of fully documented, high-specification examples. Our valuation methodology treats each 812 Competizione as a discrete asset, weighting specification over mileage: Tailor Made status, CCM-R brake health, Power16 eligibility, and ROFR clearance status carry more weight than odometer readings. A convergence of regulatory friction, Ferrari’s Luce EV launch in Q4 2026, and record-setting results across the V12 special series hierarchy is reshaping how this market prices the assets that remain.
The Variants
Ferrari 812 Competizione Variants We Actively Purchase
We actively purchase well-presented examples of the Ferrari 812 Competizione from private owners nationwide. Each vehicle is evaluated individually against its original build specification, Tailor Made status, service provenance, and CCM-R brake health rather than a generalized pricing model.
If your vehicle differs in mileage, configuration, or ownership structure, it can still be reviewed. We evaluate entity-titled vehicles, LLC transfers, and multi-owner histories on their own merits.
- Ferrari 812 Competizione (F152BCS, 2022-2024): Sovereign Icon Limited to 999 numbered coupes, allocation-only. Valuation is dictated by Tailor Made designation, color rarity, original window sticker total, and unmodified factory purity confirmed through DEIS diagnostics.
- Ferrari 812 Competizione A (F152BCA, 2022-2024): Sovereign Icon Limited to 599 units, the targa variant trades at a 60% to 100% premium over the coupe. Virtually no examples appear at public auction, and demonstrated owner reluctance to sell compounds the scarcity premium.
- Ferrari 812 Superfast (F152M, 2017-2023): Analog Sovereign Approximately 5,000 units with a 789 hp naturally aspirated V12, no hybrid assistance. Its role as the gateway to Competizione allocation grants it structural collector significance beyond its standalone market position.
- Ferrari 812 GTS (F152GTS, 2019-2023): Analog Sovereign The first front-engine V12 series-production convertible from Ferrari in 50 years. Shares the Superfast’s 789 hp analog powertrain with a retractable hardtop, trading at a consistent premium over the coupe.
Every submission receives a discrete, spec-level evaluation accounting for Tailor Made status, CCM-R brake health, and Power16 eligibility before a valuation is issued.
The Sophisticated Exit
The Ferrari 812 Competizione in 2026: An Asset Integrity Audit for the Specification-Stratified Market
In this report:
- The Allocation Lock: Relationship Integrity and ROFR Enforcement
- Statutory Predators: The Washington Tax Wall and Section 232 Audit
- Market Floor Analytics: HAGI F-Index vs. Distressed Outliers
- The Technical Audit: $42,000 Wheel Risks and CCM-R Maintenance Cliffs
- Acquisition Architecture: The Private Treaty Exit Strategy
The Allocation Lock: Why the 18-Month Custodian Protocol Is the Hidden Price Floor
The true cost of exiting an 812 Competizione is not the transaction. It is the loss of future allocation standing worth millions. Every Competizione was delivered under an Opportunity Agreement that mandates the original owner offer the vehicle back to the selling dealer before any third-party transaction, typically for 18 to 24 months from the in-service date. Violating this covenant carries consequences that extend far beyond the individual car. In September 2024, Ferrari of Houston (VAG FHTX, LLC) filed suit against client Todd Carlson in Harris County District Court (Case No. 202458863) for flipping a Purosangue within the restricted window, seeking profit recovery plus legal fees. That case has not been settled or dismissed as of March 2026. For the Competizione, the stakes are significantly higher: an unauthorized early sale triggers permanent disqualification from future limited-series allocations. F80 build slots alone have been listed at more than $6 million by secondary brokers. The option value of maintaining Top-tier VIP status with Maranello, where the threshold to reach the “Top 600” requires an estimated $10 to $15 million in lifetime Ferrari investment including Challenge racing and Cavalcade participation, may exceed the profit from selling the Competizione itself. This is the mechanism that suppresses supply independently of market demand. Ferrari’s allocation hierarchy functions as a structural price floor: owners who sell forfeit access to assets worth multiples of the Competizione’s current market value. The result is an artificial supply vacuum where only “unlocked” units, those that have cleared the ROFR window and received dealer sign-off, enter the secondary market. Buyers evaluating a Competizione should verify the original in-service date and confirm the ROFR period has lapsed before committing capital. An asset still within its custodian lock is not just a legal risk; it is a signal that the chain of title may carry reputational contamination within Maranello’s ecosystem.Statutory Predators: The Washington Tax Wall, Section 232, and the Dubai Import Trap
The 2026 regulatory environment has created a permanent cost asymmetry for modern V12 assets. All new Ferraris imported to the US now face a 15% Section 232 tariff, up from the pre-2025 rate of 2.5%. Every MSRP increase on the 12 Cilindri (base approximately $420,000), the Luce (exceeding $560,000), or the Purosangue indirectly lifts the relative value of pre-tariff assets already titled in the United States. The 812 Competizione was imported, delivered, and registered before this tariff regime existed. It sits on the favorable side of a cost wall that will not come down. Washington State’s 8% luxury motor vehicle tax (RCW 82.08.817, effective January 1, 2026) compounds the friction. The surcharge applies to any vehicle transaction amount exceeding $100,000, with no trade-in offset available for the luxury portion. On a Competizione transacting near current market levels, that surcharge alone exceeds six figures. The threshold adjusts upward by 2% every July 1, beginning at $102,000 on July 1, 2026, but the relief is negligible against assets in this price class. Both dealer and private-party sales are subject. Use tax parity ensures that vehicles brought into Washington from out of state trigger the same 8% surcharge upon registration with the Department of Licensing. For cross-border buyers evaluating the apparent $400,000+ price delta between Dubai and US dealer listings, the math eliminates the arbitrage. A non-US-spec Competizione faces the full 15% Section 232 tariff assessed on fair market value at landing, plus Registered Importer conversion costs to meet DOT/EPA standards, plus the Washington luxury surcharge calculated on the tariff-inflated basis. The state tax is assessed on the federal tariff. A $1.5 million Dubai import does not land at $1.5 million. It lands above $1.9 million before state registration, effectively matching or exceeding the cost of a domestic US-spec unit with clean North American provenance. Additionally, importing a non-US-spec car outside the authorized dealer network is a high-risk signal within Ferrari’s allocation system; Ferrari North America monitors secondary market activity, and grey-market acquisitions can trigger the same loyalty score penalties as an unauthorized flip.Market Floor Analytics: The HAGI F-Index Trajectory and the $850,000 Chain-of-Title Warning
The 812 Competizione’s appreciation from MSRP to current transaction levels tracks against the HAGI F Index, the benchmark used by institutional analysts to evaluate Ferrari as an alternative asset class alongside gold, fine art, and blue-chip equities. Within that framework, the Competizione qualifies as an “instant icon”: a vehicle that achieved collector-grade status within its first production cycle rather than requiring decades of maturation. The HAGI F Index has historically outperformed traditional equity markets across high-wealth cycles, and the Competizione’s trajectory, where values have appreciated 2x to 2.5x from MSRP within three years, is consistent with that pattern. The broader “V12 Heritage” macro-trend is marque-agnostic: the HAGI LPS (Lamborghini) index posted approximately 18% growth in a recent measurement period, confirming that naturally aspirated twelve-cylinder assets are repricing as a class, not as isolated marque events. The February 2026 RM Sotheby’s ModaMiami result anchors the ceiling: a 2023 Competizione A in Rosso Corsa with a Nurburgring stripe, 129 kilometers, single ownership, sold for $2,645,000, the highest recorded 812 family transaction. In the same sale, a Tailor Made coupe in Prugna Opaco (MSRP exceeding $910,000) did not meet its $1.8 to $2.0 million estimate and remains available at $1,850,000 through RM Sotheby’s post-sale inventory. The lesson is specific: even a one-of-one Tailor Made specification can face liquidity friction if the color palette is perceived as too niche for the broader secondary market. Spec selection at the factory is the first valuation decision; it cannot be corrected after delivery. At the opposite end, the $850,000 November 2025 result on Collecting Cars requires context, not panic. That car, a 2022 coupe in Blu Tour de France with 312 kilometers, was registered to a single owner in Morocco and sold through an online-only platform without the curated buyer pool of a major auction house. It represents roughly half the current market benchmark. For uninformed sellers, this result is a chain-of-title warning: a data point that retail aggregators will average into “market value,” dragging down the perceived worth of fully documented, premium-spec US examples. The delta between the $850,000 floor and the $2,645,000 ceiling is not noise. It is the entire thesis: specification, provenance, and exit channel determine the outcome.The Technical Audit: CCM-R Brake Liabilities, the $42,000 Carbon Wheel Risk, and the Ferrari Luce Catalyst
The 812 Competizione’s F140HC V12 uses timing chains rather than belts, eliminating the engine-out service event that historically plagued older Ferrari V12s at $6,000 to $8,000 per cycle. That is the structural advantage. The overlooked liabilities sit in the hardware surrounding the engine. The braking system uses CCM-R (Carbon Ceramic Material, Racing designation) discs with redesigned cooling architecture distinct from the standard CCM on the 812 Superfast. A full CCM-R brake refresh, calipers, discs, and racing-grade pads, runs $25,000 to $35,000 at authorized dealers. Disc wear is invisible to the naked eye and requires Ferrari’s DEIS diagnostic tools to verify remaining life percentage. A buyer who skips this audit inherits an immediate five-figure liability not covered under Ferrari’s 7-year Genuine Maintenance program, which explicitly excludes wear items. Carbon fiber wheels, a near-universal feature on premium-priced examples, carry a replacement cost of approximately $10,500 per wheel ($42,000 for the set) and require soft-jaw tire machines for service. Structural damage from a single curb strike is not repairable. An authorized dealer PPI that includes DEIS brake diagnostics and wheel integrity verification is not optional at this transaction value; it is the minimum threshold for an informed acquisition.| Component | Verified, Documented Example | Unverified, Lapsed Example |
|---|---|---|
| CCM-R Brake System | DEIS report confirms 70%+ disc life; pads within tolerance | No diagnostic data; buyer prices in $25K-$35K refresh |
| Carbon Fiber Wheels | Factory-fitted, zero curb damage, soft-jaw service confirmed | Curb strike detected; $10,500/wheel replacement, no refurbishment path |
| Power16 Eligibility | Continuous authorized service, no mods, no track use, $8,175/yr | Missed anniversary interval or ECU flash detected; permanently ineligible |
| Genuine Maintenance (7-Year) | VIN-linked, active, transferable to second owner | Aftermarket parts detected via DEIS; program voided at VIN level |
| ECU Integrity | Factory calibration confirmed; mod-free DEIS certification | Temporary tune history on record; Power16 disqualified permanently |
Acquisition Architecture: Why a Private Treaty Exit Protects What Public Auction Cannot
Bring a Trailer has listed the 812 Competizione three times. All three ended reserve-not-met, including a 60-mile 2024 example that rejected a $1,625,000 high bid on April 30, 2025. The platform’s buyer pool does not stretch reliably into seven-figure territory for modern special-series Ferraris. Each failed listing creates a permanent, searchable digital scar: a public record anchoring future negotiations downward. A reserve-not-met result on a $1.5 million asset is worse than no sale at all. It signals to every subsequent buyer that the market was offered the car and declined at the stated price. For a vehicle class where perceived exclusivity is a core value driver, a failed public offering erodes precisely the positioning that supports the premium. The privacy dimension extends beyond price optics. Public auction records connect a specific VIN to a geographic location, an ownership history, and in many cases the LLC or entity structure holding the title. Under the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act (18 U.S.C. 2721), motor vehicle registration information carries federal protections, but those protections do not extend to voluntarily disclosed auction data. A Competizione sold publicly on BaT or RM Sotheby’s generates a permanent, Google-indexed record linking the asset to the seller’s state, city, and entity. For owners holding through Montana LLCs, Delaware registrations, or multi-party family trusts, this exposure can trigger state-level use-tax enforcement in jurisdictions that actively cross-reference auction databases against residency records. The vehicle’s appreciation is real. The specification premium is documented. The regulatory environment is complex. A private treaty transaction generates no public record, no VIN exposure, no failed-auction stigma, and no searchable price anchor. It preserves the asset’s positioning within the HAGI F-Index trajectory while shielding the seller’s identity, entity structure, and transaction terms from the permanent digital record that public platforms create by design.Got Questions?
FAQs About Selling Your Ferrari 812 Competizione
How much is my Ferrari 812 Competizione worth in 2026?
The 812 Competizione coupe currently exhibits a 2.4x price spread between the lowest and highest recorded transactions, driven almost entirely by specification rather than mileage. Tailor Made examples command 15% to more than 30% above standard-spec equivalents. The Competizione A (Aperta) trades at a 60% to 100% premium over the coupe. Because no two build sheets are identical across the 999 coupes and 599 Apertas produced, an accurate valuation requires a spec-level assessment that accounts for Tailor Made status, color rarity, options density, original window sticker total, and service documentation quality. Request a private valuation here.
Does Ferrari's Right of First Refusal affect how I sell my 812 Competizione?
Yes. Every 812 Competizione was delivered under an Opportunity Agreement with a Right of First Refusal (ROFR) clause, typically lasting 18 to 24 months from the in-service date. The original owner must offer the vehicle back to the selling dealer before any third-party transaction. In September 2024, a Ferrari dealer filed a lawsuit against a client for violating a similar ROFR clause on a Purosangue. For the Competizione, violating the ROFR can result in permanent disqualification from future limited-series allocations. Buyers and sellers should verify the ROFR period has lapsed and obtain a written dealer waiver before closing.
What is the difference between the 812 Competizione and the Competizione A?
The Competizione A (Aperta) is the targa-top variant limited to 599 units versus the coupe’s 999. It features a removable carbon fiber roof panel, structural roll hoops, and an aerodynamic bridge element. The powertrain is identical: 819 bhp from the F140HC naturally aspirated V12 with a 9,500 rpm redline. The Aperta currently trades at a significant premium over the coupe on the secondary market, with the highest recorded sale reaching $2,645,000 at RM Sotheby’s Miami in February 2026.
What are the major maintenance costs I should know about before selling?
The primary cost centers are the CCM-R brake system ($25,000 to $35,000 for a full refresh at authorized dealers), carbon fiber wheels ($10,500 per wheel, $42,000 for the set, not repairable if structurally damaged), and the optional Power16 extended warranty ($8,175 annually for V12 models). The F140HC engine uses timing chains rather than belts, eliminating the engine-out belt service required on older Ferrari V12s. Annual routine service runs $4,000 to $6,500 but is covered free for the first seven years under Ferrari’s Genuine Maintenance program.
Does the Ferrari 7-year Genuine Maintenance program cover the 812 Competizione?
Yes. The program is VIN-linked, runs seven years from the first delivery date, and transfers with the vehicle to subsequent owners. Coverage includes annual scheduled service, brake fluid flushes, and diagnostic checks. Coverage can be voided at the VIN level if Ferrari’s DEIS diagnostics detect aftermarket parts, unauthorized ECU modifications, or evidence of track use. A missed annual service interval forfeits that specific interval’s complimentary coverage permanently.
Is the Ferrari 812 Competizione the last naturally aspirated V12 Ferrari?
The 812 Competizione is the final naturally aspirated V12 special series Ferrari has produced. The Ferrari 12 Cilindri (2024 onward) also carries a naturally aspirated V12 with identical 819 hp output, but it is a series-production grand tourer, not a limited special series. Ferrari’s Senior Product Marketing Manager declared at the F80 unveil that “the V6 is superior to a V12,” confirming that future limited editions will use hybrid or electrified powertrains. Ferrari’s first electric vehicle, the Luce, begins deliveries in October 2026.
How does the Washington State luxury tax affect the sale of my 812 Competizione?
Washington’s 8% luxury motor vehicle tax (RCW 82.08.817, effective January 1, 2026) applies to the portion of any vehicle transaction exceeding $100,000. There is no trade-in offset for the luxury portion, and both dealer and private-party sales are subject. On a Competizione transacting near current market levels, the surcharge alone exceeds $100,000. Vehicles brought into Washington from out of state trigger the same surcharge upon registration. The threshold increases by 2% annually starting July 1, 2026.
Can I sell my 812 Competizione privately without creating a public auction record?
Yes. A private treaty transaction through a dealer generates no public record, no searchable VIN exposure, no price anchor in auction databases, and no failed-auction stigma. Public platforms like Bring a Trailer create permanent, Google-indexed records of VINs, seller locations, and transaction outcomes. For owners holding through LLCs, Montana registrations, or family trusts, this exposure can trigger state-level use-tax scrutiny. Exotics Wanted’s acquisition process is fully private: valuation, negotiation, and closing occur without any public data point attached to the vehicle’s history.
What documents do I need to sell my Ferrari 812 Competizione?
The most important document is the original window sticker, which establishes MSRP, confirms Tailor Made status, and itemizes every factory option. Beyond that: the title (or LLC operating agreement if entity-titled), current registration, all service records from authorized Ferrari dealers, the Ferrari Build Sheet or dealer delivery documentation, and any ROFR waiver from the original selling dealer. Sellers who retained the window sticker receive faster, more precise valuations because specification is the primary driver of value at this level.
Do you buy Ferrari 812 Competizione models with modifications?
We evaluate each vehicle individually. However, modifications on the 812 Competizione carry significant consequences beyond cosmetic preference. A single ECU flash, even temporarily applied and subsequently reversed, permanently disqualifies the vehicle from Ferrari’s Power16 extended warranty program. Aftermarket exhaust systems or non-factory diagnostic equipment can void the 7-year Genuine Maintenance coverage at the VIN level. Modified examples typically face a valuation adjustment that reflects both the lost warranty eligibility and the narrowed buyer pool in the collector market. We recommend a full DEIS diagnostic report before submission.