Rev N Rise

Rev N Rise
Advertisement
Your Advertisement Here
728 × 50 · Leaderboard Banner
00:00:00 | Loading…
Rev N Rise
The Future of Auto News

Ferrari — History, Models and Everything You Need to Know

Founded1947
CountryItaly
HQMaranello, Italy
CEOBenedetto Vigna

AI-generated concept illustration — Ferrari brand overview. | Rev N Rise

Ferrari is the most powerful automotive brand in the world — a name that transcends cars entirely and exists as a symbol of passion, performance and Italian artistry recognised on every continent. Founded in Maranello in 1947 by Enzo Ferrari, the brand has won more Formula 1 championships than any other constructor, produced some of the most beautiful and exciting cars in history and maintained a level of desirability that no marketing campaign can manufacture — only decades of extraordinary products can create.

1947Year Founded
16xF1 Constructors' Titles
13,663Cars Delivered 2023
The History of Ferrari

Enzo Ferrari was a racing driver and team manager before he was a car manufacturer. He managed the Scuderia Ferrari racing team — operating within Alfa Romeo's racing programme — from 1929 before a dispute with Alfa Romeo led him to establish his own company in 1939. Initially prohibited from using the Ferrari name on racing cars by a non-compete agreement with Alfa Romeo, the first car officially badged as a Ferrari — the 125 S — was completed on March 12 1947 in Maranello. It used a 1.5-litre V12 engine — establishing the V12 as Ferrari's defining powerplant signature from the very first car.

Ferrari's early road cars were essentially race cars with concessions for road use — the legendary 250 GTO of 1962 is now the most valuable car in the world, with examples selling at auction for over $70 million. The Dino of 1967 introduced a mid-engine layout that would define Ferrari's sports cars for decades. The 308 — familiar globally from the Magnum P.I. television series — brought Ferrari to a wider audience. The Testarossa, F40, F50, Enzo and LaFerrari form a lineage of halo hypercars that each defined the performance benchmark of their era.

Ferrari was partially owned by Fiat from 1969 — when Enzo Ferrari sold a 50 percent stake to fund the racing programme — and eventually became fully part of Fiat Chrysler Automobiles. In 2016, Ferrari was separated from FCA and listed as an independent company on the New York Stock Exchange — the most significant corporate event in the brand's history. The Agnelli family's Exor holding company remains the largest shareholder.

Formula 1 — Racing in the Blood

Scuderia Ferrari is the only constructor to have competed in every Formula 1 World Championship season since the series began in 1950. In 75 years of competition Ferrari has won 16 Constructors' Championships and 15 Drivers' Championships — more than any other team. Drivers champions include Alberto Ascari, Mike Hawthorn, Phil Hill, John Surtees, Niki Lauda, Jody Scheckter, Michael Schumacher — who won five consecutive titles from 2000 to 2004 — and Kimi Räikkönen. Ferrari's F1 programme is not merely a marketing exercise — it is the soul of the company. Enzo Ferrari famously described road cars as what funded the racing. That relationship remains fundamental to Ferrari's identity today.

Ferrari's Current Lineup
Roma
Grand tourer — 620hp V8 turbo — elegant proportions
Roma Spider
Open-top Roma — retractable hardtop — 620hp
296 GTB
V6 hybrid — 830hp — mid-engine plug-in hybrid
296 GTS
Open 296 — Spider — 830hp hybrid
SF90 Stradale
1,000hp PHEV flagship — 0-100 in 2.5 seconds
SF90 Spider
Open SF90 — retractable roof — 1,000hp
812 Competizione
6.5-litre naturally aspirated V12 — 830hp — last pure V12
Purosangue
Ferrari's first SUV — V12 — 715hp — four doors
Ferrari Elettrica
First Ferrari EV — 2025 — fully electric
F80
1,200hp hypercar — V6 hybrid — limited to 799 units
What Makes Ferrari Different

Ferrari's competitive position is unique in the automotive world — it is the only manufacturer whose demand consistently and deliberately exceeds supply. Ferrari carefully controls production volumes — delivering just over 13,000 cars globally in 2023 — to maintain the exclusivity that underpins its pricing power. A Ferrari buyer typically waits years for allocation of the most desirable models. The brand's XX programme — track-only hypercars available exclusively to invited clients — creates a hierarchy of ownership that generates intense loyalty among the ultra-wealthy. The Purosangue — Ferrari's first four-door, four-seat vehicle — was greeted with horror by purists and immediately became one of the most waitlisted vehicles in the brand's history. Ferrari's first electric car — the Elettrica — will be the most scrutinised automotive product of 2025. Whether it delivers the emotional engagement that has defined every Ferrari since the 125 S will determine whether the brand's transition to electrification can be achieved without sacrificing the soul that makes Ferrari irreplaceable.

Frequently Asked Questions
When was Ferrari founded?
Ferrari was founded on March 12 1947 in Maranello, Italy by Enzo Ferrari. The first Ferrari — the 125 S with a 1.5-litre V12 — was completed that year.
How many Formula 1 championships has Ferrari won?
Ferrari has won 16 F1 Constructors' Championships and 15 Drivers' Championships — more than any other team. Scuderia Ferrari has competed in every F1 season since 1950.
What is the most expensive Ferrari ever made?
The Ferrari 250 GTO is the most valuable — examples have sold at auction for over $70 million. Among modern Ferraris, the LaFerrari Aperta and F80 hypercar are among the most expensive.
Is Ferrari making an electric car?
Yes. Ferrari launched its first electric car — the Ferrari Elettrica — in 2025. It is Ferrari's first fully electric production vehicle.
Who owns Ferrari?
Ferrari N.V. is publicly listed on the NYSE and Euronext Milan. The Agnelli family's Exor holding company is the largest shareholder. Ferrari became independent from Fiat Chrysler in 2016.
Veera K — Founder & Editor, Rev N Rise
Author Veera K Founder & Editor — Rev N Rise

I started Rev N Rise because I wanted a place where car coverage felt real — honest, enthusiastic and written by someone who genuinely loves the automotive world.

I've been obsessed with cars for as long as I can remember. From tracking every new launch to breaking down which car gives you the best value — this is what I do, and I genuinely love it.

Thanks for reading. Let's talk cars.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top