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Luxury flagship & exoticfour-seat V12 GTNo longer sold new

Ferrari FF value and depreciation

Known for all-wheel drive v12 shooting brake.

Year-1 depreciation
25%
3-year retention
52%
5-year retention
35%
Tier
Luxury flagship & exotic

Depreciation curve

R0R25R50R75R100Now1y2y3y4y5y6y7y8y9y10yYears from now

We class the Ferrari FF as a luxury flagship & exotic in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 52% after three years and 35% after five. Flagship saloons and exotics shed value brutally once the first owner is done. Some halo cars (911, certain AMG and M cars) beat this curve and carry per-model overrides.

Retention table

AfterRetained
1 year75%
3 years52%
5 years35%
7 years24%
10 years13%

Estimates for a new purchase at list price; retail basis, trade-in ≈ 12% under retail.

The FF brought a four-seat, all-wheel drive V12 shooting brake to South Africa from 2012. Only a handful were sold new here. Used cars are rare and depreciation was steep early on, making them relatively strong value now against their original price.

FF against its rivals

Ferrari FF: common questions

Does the Ferrari FF hold its value?

We class the Ferrari FF as a luxury flagship & exotic in our 12-tier model, which puts its retention at roughly 52% after three years and 35% after five. Flagship saloons and exotics shed value brutally once the first owner is done. Some halo cars (911, certain AMG and M cars) beat this curve and carry per-model overrides.

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All figures are modelled estimates for planning, not offers or valuations. Data reviewed 2026.