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Ferrari Amalfi Spider Vs. Ferrari Roma Spider

Ferrari Amalfi Spider Vs. Ferrari Roma Spider

Maranello's newest open-top grand tourer builds on the Roma Spider with sharper aerodynamics, a more powerful V8, and a return to tactile interior controls

Eight months ago, in early July, when Ferrari showcased the Roma’s successor, the Amalfi, we did an in-depth comparison between the two coupes. With the Amalfi Spider variant dropping earlier this week, it was only natural to pit it against the Roma Spider. 

The new Ferrari Amalfi Spider extends the Italian marque’s front-engine V8 grand touring formula into open-top territory, pairing the coupe’s refinements with the long tradition of Ferrari convertible GTs, a lineage that stretches back nearly 70 years, beginning with models like the 250 GT California Spyder. The tradition later continued through the 365 GTS/4 Daytona Spider, 550 Barchetta, California, Portofino, and eventually the Roma Spider. 

The Amalfi Spider now carries that legacy forward, and having recently savored the Amalfi coupe and reviewed the Roma Spider not long before, this comparison is especially relevant to see how it compares to both models.

Exterior Design

Ferrari’s Centro Stile, led by Flavio Manzoni, mainly focused their efforts on the front and rear sections.  As with the coupe, the Roma Spider’s body-colored perforated grille is gone. In its place sits a cleaner front fascia with a wide horizontal air intake, while lighting and sensors now sit within a darker recessed section. The hood also features a flatter bulge when compared to the Roma Spider. The result ties the Amalfi Spider more closely to newer Ferraris such as the Daytona SP3 and 12Cilindri. 

Viewed from the side, the Amalfi Spider retains the same elegant classic front-engine rear drive proportions that defined the Roma Spider. The long hood, rear-set cabin, and muscular rear haunches remain signatures of Ferrari’s front-engine architecture.

The key differentiators are a more pronounced crease and newer wheel designs for the Amalfi Spider. Ferrari also introduces Rosso Tramonto, a metallic red with warm orange undertones inspired by the Mediterranean sky at sunset.

At the rear, the biggest visual changes are around the taillights and the placement of the license plate. The Amalfi Spider features a three-position active spoiler that adjusts automatically depending on speed and load. In its most aggressive setting, it generates 243 pounds of additional downforce at 155 mph. A larger carbon fiber diffuser and revised rear surfacing also give the tail a wider, more planted look than the Roma Spider.

As for the more functional bits and aerodynamic improvements, small air channels above the headlights reduce pressure over the front end while feeding cooling air into the engine bay. Beneath the bodywork, vortex generators and revised underbody aero improve airflow management. 

Overall, this is still a restrained Ferrari by modern standards, subtle, smooth, and more classic GT than extrovert supercar. Design is, of course, subjective, and while the Amalfi Spider looks cleaner and more technical, some will still prefer the Roma Spider’s more sculpted, organic surfacing. Each to their own.

Interior Design

Inside, just as with the coupe, Ferrari has made some significant changes. The Roma Spider relied heavily on touch-sensitive steering wheel controls, and while its waterfall-style center console and flowing dashboard looked dramatic, the interface itself was never especially intuitive. 

The Amalfi Spider fixes that. Ferrari has replaced the touch surfaces with physical buttons and tactile switches, while also bringing back the iconic anodized aluminum engine start button mounted on the steering wheel.

The dash retains Ferrari’s dual-cockpit architecture, but the layout is more straightforward than before. A 15.6-inch digital instrument cluster sits behind the wheel, supported by a 10.25-inch landscape infotainment display and an 8.8-inch passenger screen that shows performance data. Wireless Apple CarPlay, Android Auto, and wireless charging are standard.

Visually, the Roma Spider cabin still appears more dramatic in some respects, with its center display integrated more fluidly into the dashboard, whereas the Amalfi’s layout is more functional and upright. But on usability alone, the Amalfi Spider is the clear winner.

Like the Roma Spider, the Amalfi Spider remains a 2+ configuration, meaning the rear seats are best reserved for children or extra luggage. Ferrari also integrates a wind deflector between the rear seats that deploys electronically to reduce turbulence during open-top driving.

Finally, the soft top remains central to the car’s identity and deploys in just 13.5 seconds, and you can operate it at speeds up to 37 mph, folding into a compact 8.7-inch stack. Ferrari says the five-layer fabric roof provides insulation close to that of the brand’s retractable hard-top systems. As for cargo volume (this is a long-distance GT after all), you’re looking at  9.0 cubic feet with the roof up and 6.1 cubic feet when down. For some context, the Aston Martin Vanquish Volante offers 7.7 cubic feet with the roof up and 6.6 cubic feet with the roof down.

Ferrari Amalfi Spider vs Roma Spider Performance

Both cars feature Ferrari’s F154 90° Twin-Turbo V8 3.9-liter twin-turbocharged V8, paired with an eight-speed dual-clutch transmission that sends power exclusively to the rear wheels. However, Ferrari has further developed the engine for the Amalfi Spider, increasing output while improving throttle response and turbocharger control.

Compared with the Roma Spider, the Amalfi Spider gains 28 horsepower, for a total of 640 horsepower, while maintaining the same torque figure of 560 pound-feet. With a 3.3-second dash to 62 mph, it is slightly quicker over the Roma Spider, but both maintain the same 199 mph top speed with the roof down. 

The Amalfi Spider further benefits from meaningful chassis upgrades. Ferrari introduces brake-by-wire technology, improving braking precision and pedal feel. Carbon-ceramic brakes work with ABS Evo and Side Slip Control 6.1 to sharpen stability and confidence under hard braking.

The structural reinforcements do result in a weight gain, with Ferrari listing the Amalfi Spider’s dry weight at 3,431 pounds, which makes it about 190 pounds heavier than the Amalfi coupe’s 3,241-pound dry weight. 

2027 Ferrari Amalfi Spider Price & Availability

Pricing for the Amalfi coupe begins around $280,000, and the Spider will likely command a premium, pushing well-equipped examples beyond $300,000 once Ferrari’s extensive options list is factored in. Key rivals include the Aston Martin DB12 Volante, Bentley Continental GTC, Porsche 911 Turbo Cabriolet, and Mercedes-AMG SL 63.

Ultimately, the Amalfi Spider does not attempt to reinvent Ferrari’s convertible GT concept. Instead, it builds on the Roma Spider with improved usability, sharper aerodynamics, more tactile controls, and slightly stronger performance. The Roma Spider may still be the more expressive design, but the Amalfi Spider is the more resolved car. 

Finally, the name itself. Where Roma referenced the glamour of Italy’s capital, the Eternal City, and the spirit of La Nuova Dolce Vita, Amalfi, by contrast, takes its name from one of Italy’s most glamorous regions, which has some spectacular coastal roads. While it’s a great name for the coupe, it is truly fitting for the cabriolet and naturally belongs on an elegant front-engine rear-wheel drive Ferrari convertible like this one.

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Images: Ferrari

Khris Bharath