What replaced the F355?
The F355 was succeeded by the all-new Ferrari 360 in 1999. Given all these positives, it’s not surprising that values of the F355 have increased significantly over the past few years: for the standard Berlinetta, Hagerty Price Guide ‘Excellent’ condition values have almost quadrupled since 2019, easily outpacing its 348 and 360 stablemates.Available as either coupe, convertible, or targa, the F355 has long since reached the bottom of its value curve, and has been climbing for some time now, with classic status in a decade only going to enhance its desirability.
Is the F355 Berlinetta a rare car?
Is the ferrari f355 rare? Short answer: for a modern(ish) exotic, yes. The f355 lived a relatively brief life from 1994 to 1999 and, while ferrari doesn’t publish official numbers, widely accepted figures peg production at around 11,273 units across berlinetta (coupe), gts (targa), and spider (convertible) variants. Of course, the very best collector-quality f355s can fetch even more, and it’s certainly possible to pay over £100,000 or above €150,000 for exceptional cars. The rare track-focused ‘challenge’ model tends to attract premiums in the region of 50%+ over a standard f355 berlinetta.
How much is a 1995 Ferrari F355?
Typically, you can expect to pay around $138,000 for a 1995 Ferrari F355 Berlinetta in good condition with average spec. The cheapest current Ferrari is the Roma, and although it might come with a starting price well north of $200K, used models from its debut 2021 model year have fallen under the $190,000 mark. What do you get with the Roma?The most expensive Ferrari of all time is the 1962 Ferrari 250 GTO, which sold for a whopping $70 million in a private sale.