Ferrari submitted 13 trademark applications to Italy's patent office on May 20, covering three current production platforms and pointing to one of the most active product cycles Maranello has seen in years.
The applications, all filed under Ferrari S.p.A. and currently under examination by the UIBM, Italy's national trademark authority, carry sequential application numbers confirming they were submitted in a single session. The full list, drawn directly from the UIBM database, is below.
F80
- FERRARI F80 ROADSTER (302026000092698)
- FERRARI FXX80 (302026000092713)
- FERRARI F80XX (302026000092722)
- FERRARI FXX-H (302026000092734)
- FERRARI F80 LICENSE PLATE (302026000092707)
The Ferrari F80 group includes F80 Roadster, F80XX, FXX80, and the FXX-H, the name that has received the least attention in coverage of these filings. The license plate is likely a branded accessory or merchandise item, not a production model designation. The H suffix points to a hybrid-specific track program built around the F80's existing powertrain.
Ferrari has run two previous programs in this format, the FXX, based on the Enzo, and the FXX-K, based on the LaFerrari, both track-only machines reserved for a short list of approved clients.
12Cilindri
- FERRARI 12CYLINDERS TG (302026000092692)
- FERRARI 12CYLINDERS MM OPEN (302026000092665)
- FERRARI 12CYLINDERS GTO (302026000092701)
- FERRARI 12 CYLINDERS MM (302026000092716)
The 12Cilindri filings correct a detail that circulated widely when this story first broke. Ferrari registered 12Cylinders TG, potentially hinting at a Targa designation on the V12 grand tourer, not the F80, as most outlets have reported so far. The batch also includes 12 Cylinders GTO, 12 Cylinders MM, and 12 Cylinders MM Open.
The MM suffix has appeared on Ferraris tied to the Mille Miglia race since the 1950s, most recently on a one-off 458, landing in our list of rarest Ferraris in the world. The GTO badge carries a different gravity entirely. Ferrari has used it three times: the 250 GTO in 1962, the 288 GTO in 1984, and the 599 GTO between 2010 and 2012. Each one represented a significant escalation over the standard car in weight, aerodynamics, and intent. A 12Cilindri GTO would sit at the absolute peak of Ferrari's naturally aspirated V12 lineup.
296
- FERRARI 296 ROAD CHALLENGE (302026000092653)
- FERRARI 296 CHALLENGE EVO (302026000092662)
- FERRARI 296 CS (302026000092674)
- FERRARI 296 CHALLENGE APPROVED (302026000092686)
The 296 filings include four names. Ferrari registered 296 Road Challenge, alongside 296 CS, 296 Challenge Evo, and 296 Challenge Approved. The Challenge Stradale name last appeared on the 360 in 2003, giving way to the Scuderia, Speciale, and Pista designations that followed for each successive V8 generation. Its return signals Ferrari is preparing the most driver-focused 296 variant yet for road use, with the Challenge Evo pointing toward an updated competition car.
Trademark registration does not guarantee production, but Ferrari rarely files names without intention, and these were filed in the week leading up to the Luce's launch.
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Source: Ufficio Italiano Brevetti e Marchi, application numbers 302026000092653 through 302026000092734, filed May 20, 2026.