A 2003 Ferrari Enzo, the only example ever factory-finished in Rosso Dino, is currently live on duPont REGISTRY Live with 3,758 miles on the odometer, marking the first time a Ferrari halo car and the first member of the Ferrari Big Five to ever be listed on our auctions platform.
Rosso Dino, as a color, carries immense significance in Ferrari's history, as it is named after Alfredo "Dino" Ferrari, Enzo Ferrari's eldest son, an automotive engineer who passed away at 24 from Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy. Enzo named both the Dino chassis and the color in his memory. The shade originally debuted in the 1960s on the Ferrari 250 GTO before spending decades outside the paint catalog.
The color returned in 2002 when a single client requested it for his Enzo, making this car directly responsible for bringing the color back into Ferrari's production history. We, in fact, featured this very car (chassis #134278) back in 2017. Ferrari's own factory window sticker documents it as an "out-of-range paint colour." Of the 127 Enzos delivered to the United States from a worldwide run of 400, this is the only one wearing it.
The Enzo itself needs little introduction to serious Ferrari collectors. It arrived in 2002 as Ferrari's flagship for the new millennium, named after the company's founder and developed around technology drawn directly from Scuderia Ferrari's Formula 1 program. Michael Schumacher contributed to development testing at Fiorano, and the body was styled under Ken Okuyama at Pininfarina.

Conceived and launched under then-President and CEO Luca di Montezemolo, it belongs to the aforementioned Ferrari Big Five alongside the 288 GTO, F40, F50, and LaFerrari. Another Enzo derivative, the Maserati MC12, which duPont REGISTRY covered in a market spotlight just days ago, shares its carbon-fiber chassis, V12 engine, and transmission with Ferrari’s flagship from the 2000s.
The Enzo introduced several road car firsts: a full carbon-fiber monocoque chassis, carbon-ceramic Brembo brakes, and active aerodynamics. Its 6-speed paddle-shift automated manual transmission executed gear changes in 150 milliseconds, faster than any production road car at the time of launch.
<- Gallery ->
The naturally aspirated F140B 6.0-liter V12 that produces 651 horsepower represents exactly the kind of powerplant collectors are aggressively pursuing as electrification reshapes the industry, driving renewed appetite for naturally aspirated V12s and V8s alike.
In the Enzo market, color, provenance, and mileage drive value more directly than almost any other variable. You can view the full breakdown of all the Enzo colors here. A one-of-one factory color specification for an example like this one, showing under 4,000 miles, in a finish with this much history behind it, sits in a category of its own. The full provenance, specification, and latest service history are detailed in the listing.
If you're interested in financing this car or another exotic car, be sure to get pre-qualified.