Broad Arrow with Key Adds for Amelia Island Sale

Broad Arrow Auctions has confirmed a five-car private collection as part of the final consignments for its 2026 Amelia Concours Auction, scheduled for March 6–7 at The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island. The sale is the official auction of the The Amelia Concours d’Elegance and will feature more than 170 collector cars over two days.

The group consists of low-mileage Ferrari and Porsche super and hypercars, most offered from original ownership. Leading the collection is a 2003 Ferrari Enzo, chassis 131242, estimated at $12,000,000–$16,000,000. Finished in Nero D.S., it is one of 12 North American-delivery examples specified in that color. The car shows fewer than 450 miles and is described as retaining its factory delivery items, including the original three-piece luggage set, trunk kit components and Ferrari congratulatory letter.

Also included is a 2021 Ferrari Monza SP2, chassis 266102, estimated at $4,250,000–$4,750,000. Broad Arrow states this is the first U.S.-market example of the model to be offered publicly at auction. The SP2 is part of Ferrari’s limited-production Icona series, with 499 examples produced across SP1 and SP2 variants. This car is finished in Rosso Corsa over Nero leather with Jeans Aunde Blu upholstery and shows 16 miles at cataloging. Delivery accessories are reported to remain unused.

The Porsche contingent begins with a 1988 Porsche 959 Sport, chassis 011, estimated at $4,250,000–$5,000,000. One of 29 U.S.-market 959 Sport models, it was part of a group of eight examples officially imported through Porsche Motorsport in 1988. Finished in Grand Prix White over Dark Grey Metallic leather and cloth, it shows 11,593 miles. The car was displayed at the Porsche Museum in Stuttgart in 2014 and has been part of the consigning collection since 2017.

A 2015 Porsche 918 Spyder, chassis 062, is estimated at $2,400,000–$2,800,000. Offered from its original owner, the car shows 352 miles and is finished in Rhodium Silver Metallic over Garnet Red leather with silver piping. It is described as well-optioned and regularly serviced.

Rounding out the private group is a 2017 Ferrari F12tdf, one of 799 produced. Estimated at $2,000,000–$2,500,000, the single-owner example shows fewer than 100 miles. It is specified through Ferrari’s Tailor Made program in Azzurro California with Blu Scozia and Bianco Avus stripes over Blu Sterling leather.

Beyond the five-car collection, the Amelia sale will feature significant Ferrari models from multiple eras. A 1990 Ferrari F40, chassis 87219, carries an estimate of $3,250,000–$3,750,000. Ferrari Classiche certified and fully matching-numbers, it is one of 213 examples delivered to the U.S. and shows 8,065 miles. It is offered with its original Schedoni luggage, manuals, tools and keys.

Pre-war and early competition Ferrari history is represented by a 1954 Ferrari 500 Mondial Pinin Farina Spider, chassis 0408 MD, estimated at $2,800,000–$3,200,000. One of 13 Pinin Farina-bodied 500 Mondials, it was campaigned as a works-entered car in the 1954 Mille Miglia and is documented for both period and vintage competition.

Additional consignments include a 1963 250 GT Berlinetta Lusso, a 1967 275 GTB/4, a 1966 275 GTB/6C and a 1966 275 GTS, several of which are Ferrari Classiche certified.

With the addition of the private collection, Broad Arrow’s 2026 Amelia Concours Auction reinforces its focus on low-mileage modern supercars alongside established Ferrari competition and road models.

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