In a market where special Ferraris often trade hands one at a time, a unique “bookend” pairing has surfaced with one clear condition: they’re being offered together. The set links two of Maranello’s most coveted front-engined V12 halo cars—a 2017 Ferrari F12tdf and a 2023 Ferrari 812 Competizione—spec’d as a deliberate, modern tribute pairing and presented with ultra-low miles, matching Tailor-Made cues, and collector-grade documentation. The asking price for the duo is $3.9 million, and the intent is to keep the story intact by selling them as a single package.
The common thread starts with the finish. Both cars wear the same Argento/Aluminum Nurburgring Opaca satin paint—an expensive, design-forward choice that’s become even more striking in person thanks to full XPEL satin clear-bra protection applied across the painted surfaces. Inside, the theme continues with Heritage Tan (“Joey” heritage) leather, Kevlar flooring, and coordinated contrast stitching and trim, giving the cabins a purposeful, motorsport-meets-luxury feel. Even the details collectors obsess over—like factory luggage—were matched, with both cars ordered with the Ferrari travel bags finished in the same heritage leather (with cover bags), reinforcing the “paired set” concept beyond the obvious exterior and interior symmetry.
GALLERY-EMBED
Where the 812 Competizione separates itself is in the subtle, modern-era flourishes that didn’t exist in the F12tdf’s time. The 812 receives a Grigio dual-contrast livery running nose-to-tail, plus contemporary Pirelli high-performance tires featuring Grigio striping and lettering. And while the F12tdf retains its traditional rear glass, the 812 Competizione replaces that entire idea with its signature full carbon rear deck, incorporating an antenna mast and rear-view camera—one of the model’s most recognizable design statements. The “Tributo” narrative gets even more literal in the cabin: the 812’s Tailor-Made carbon inner door sills carry the message “Tailor-Made Tributo” along with a chassis-specific nod tying it directly to the F12tdf.
The documentation and provenance touches go a step further. The 812 Competizione was ordered with the “Yellow Build Book” milestone production option, and the car also features assembly-line worker signatures—a human, factory-floor element that’s rarely seen and speaks to how intentionally this build was treated from the start. Additional under-hood presentation includes signed dry carbon fairings surrounding the V12, emphasizing that this isn’t simply a well-optioned example—it’s a curated statement piece designed to live alongside the earlier car as a matched set.
GALLERY-EMBED
Mileage and condition underline the collector's intent. The 2017 F12tdf shows approximately 1,472 miles and carries chassis #228833, with the model’s widely recognized limited production run of 799 units. It includes two keys, books, cover, charger, and matching luggage, and it retains Ferrari CPO warranty coverage. The 2023 812 Competizione is even more delivery-fresh at 289 miles, identified as chassis #295365, also described as part of a 799-unit production run. It includes two keys, books, charger, a production book, and matching luggage (notably, the cover is listed as not included), and it likewise carries Ferrari CPO warranty coverage.
Taken individually, each car checks the boxes that matter: limited production, V12 pedigree, standout spec, and careful preservation. Together, they read like a single collection acquisition—an analog-to-modern Ferrari V12 arc that was planned, executed, and protected with the intent to be kept as a matched pair. Now, that pair is being offered to the next steward as one purchase, one story, and one unmistakable statement: two of Ferrari’s sharpest front-engined V12 expressions, aligned down to the paint code and heritage leather, available only as the complete set for $3.9M.