The first street-legal Bugatti Bolide broke cover at the 2026 Goodwood Festival of Speed, the result of a private commission by Lanzante Limited, the British engineering specialist based in Petersfield, England. As duPont REGISTRY reported in March, Lanzante was already working on two Bolides for conversion, and this example is the first to be publicly revealed in its street-legal form.
The track-only Bolide represents the ultimate expression of Bugatti's W16 era under the Volkswagen Group. Production was capped at just 40 units worldwide, each priced at approximately €4 million before taxes ( roughly $4.4 millio) and built exclusively for the track. Its 8.0-liter quad-turbocharged W16 engine produces 1,578 horsepower and 1,180 pound-feet of torque, packaged in a carbon-fiber monocoque that weighs just 3,197 pounds and generates nearly three tons of downforce at speed. All 40 have now been delivered, with the final example leaving the Molsheim atelier in late 2025.
Making a track-only hypercar like the Bolide street legal requires Lanzante to address several fundamental incompatibilities with road use. The work ranges from the W16's emissions compliance, replacement of the track-specific exhaust system, transmission modifications, comprehensive drivetrain changes, street-legal lighting, and pedestrian protection requirements.
The Bolide's original Michelin racing tires, rated for just 37 miles of use and costing $8,000 each, would have been the first items to be replaced.
The seven-speed dual-clutch transmission's user-friendly architecture makes it a viable candidate for the conversion. Full details on this specific chassis remain limited at the time of writing, though a more robust cooling system has been confirmed as one of the modifications carried out.
Lanzante is not new to such conversions. The firm was a key part of McLaren's 1995 Le Mans victory with the F1 GTR and has since built its reputation around track-to-road conversions of machines, including the McLaren P1 GTR, Lamborghini Sesto Elemento, and Porsche 935. The Bolide, however, is the most extreme car Lanzante has yet converted, and almost certainly the most valuable.
In terms of current market values, the Bolide commands a significant premium above its original price. Bugatti Bolide chassis 001 carried a $4.5 million to $6 million estimate at Gooding Christie's Pebble Beach in August last year, while a separate example carried an estimate of $4.7 million to $7 million at RM Sotheby's Paris in early 2026. The most recent confirmed public sale brought $5,083,290, reflecting growing collector demand for one of the rarest and most technically extreme hypercars of the W16 generation.
Images: @Lanzantelimited