Evaluation: From the second to last year for the Testarossa series. Showing 14,173 miles. Well cared for. Rare colors. Looks nearly new. Engine service one month ago. Represented as the 16th of 75 US-market cars, and this color combination is reportedly only found on one other F512M.
Bottom Line: The F512M is also the quickest, the rarest, the most developed, and naturally the most expensive. These cars spiked in value along with so many other classic Ferraris during the mid-2010s, then plateaued and stayed steady until growing again during 2020-22. This car’s growth from its $599,500 sale price at Pebble Beach 2015 to $681,500 at Arizona 2023 is indicative of that.