01
Ferrari · 1984–1985

288 GTO

Twin-turbo V8 400 hp 272 units 305 km/h
Ferrari 288 GTO

The 288 GTO is the founding model of this lineage. Originally designed for Group B homologation — a program later canceled — it was Ferrari's first true modern supercar. Raw, turbocharged, and utterly uncompromising, it set the template for everything that followed. With only 272 examples built, it remains one of the most desirable Ferraris in history.

Launch: ~$84,000 Today: $3.5–4.2 M 0–100 km/h: 4.9 s
"The car that started it all — the first modern Ferrari halo, built for a racing series that never happened."
02
Ferrari · 1987–1992

F40

Twin-turbo V8 478 hp 1,311 units 324 km/h
Ferrari F40

Unveiled to celebrate Ferrari's 40th anniversary, the F40 was the last car personally overseen by Enzo Ferrari. It became the icon of an era — the first production car to break 200 mph. No power steering, no ABS, no carpet, no compromise. Just a twin-turbo V8, a carbon fiber shell, and the purest driving experience ever offered to the public.

Launch: $399,150 Today: $2.0–3.2 M 0–100 km/h: 4.1 s
"The last Ferrari Enzo himself approved. No car since has matched its brutal, unfiltered honesty."
03
Ferrari · 1995–1997

F50

NA V12 520 hp 349 units 325 km/h
Ferrari F50

The F50 represented Ferrari's boldest ambition — to bring Formula 1 technology directly to the road. Its carbon fiber tub was derived from the F92A F1 car. The engine, a 4.7L V12, was bolted directly to the chassis as a structural member and screamed to 8,500 rpm with a sound unlike anything on four wheels. Often underrated, the F50 is increasingly celebrated as a masterpiece.

Launch: $475,000 Today: $3.2–4.5 M 0–100 km/h: 3.9 s
"A Formula 1 car with a roof — the F50's V12 remains one of the greatest engines Ferrari ever produced."
04
Ferrari · 2002–2004

Enzo

NA V12 660 hp 400 units >350 km/h
Ferrari Enzo

Named after Ferrari's founder, the Enzo carried cutting-edge Formula 1 technology of the early 2000s — an F1-style sequential gearbox, active aerodynamics, and extensive carbon fiber construction. Its 6.0L V12 produced 660 hp and propelled it past 350 km/h. Named for the man who started it all, it was worthy of the honor.

Launch: ~$650,000 Today: $3.2–4.5 M 0–100 km/h: 3.65 s
"660 horsepower, F1 technology, and a name that carries the entire weight of Ferrari's history."
05
Ferrari · 2013–2018

LaFerrari

V12 Hybrid 963 hp 709 total >350 km/h
Ferrari LaFerrari

Ferrari's first hybrid hypercar, combining a 6.3L naturally aspirated V12 with an electric motor derived from the KERS system in Formula 1. The result was 963 combined horsepower and a sub-3-second sprint to 100 km/h. With only 499 coupés and 210 open-top Apertas built, LaFerrari closed the Big Five era in the most spectacular fashion imaginable.

Launch: €1.3–1.5 M Today: $3.0–5.0 M 0–100 km/h: 2.9 s
"963 horsepower, a hybrid V12, and the most evocative name in automotive history — simply 'The Ferrari'."

The Big Five — Compared

Model Years Units Launch Price Current Value 0–100 km/h Top Speed
288 GTO1984–1985272~$84,000$3.5–4.2 M4.9 s305 km/h
F401987–19921,311$399,150$2.0–3.2 M4.1 s324 km/h
F501995–1997349$475,000$3.2–4.5 M3.9 s325 km/h
Enzo2002–2004400~$650,000$3.2–4.5 M3.65 s>350 km/h
LaFerrari2013–2018709€1.3–1.5 M$3.0–5.0 M2.9 s>350 km/h
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