- A Lambo Essenza SCV12 at auction has an estimate well below cost.
- Only 40 examples were built, yet resale values are already sliding.
- The car’s track-only status limits its pool of serious buyers significantly.
The market has a habit of humbling even the most exclusive machinery, and this one is no exception. The Essenza SCV12 helped Lamborghini bid farewell to its non-electrified, V12 supercars and was conceived as a track-only model capped at just 40 units worldwide. That sounds like the perfect recipe for a highly prized collector’s item that should climb in value. It is not playing out that way.
At RM Sotheby’s upcoming Monaco auction, it is selling one of these rare SCV12 models. The car is number 28 and is painted in a glistening shade of bronze with black highlights and has only ever been driven 505 km. When these supercars were new, they started at €2.2 million or $2.5 million in the US. Even so, this example is expected to sell for between $1.4 million and $2.1 million.
Read: It Cost $35,372 To Play With This Huracan Sterrato For 251 Miles
Admittedly, that is a wide estimate, yet it still falls short of the original sticker. Part of the problem is baked into the car itself. It cannot be driven on public roads, and even for well-heeled buyers, lining up track time and access to suitable circuits is not always straightforward. For a machine this focused, the pool of willing owners is smaller than its production run might suggest.
What Do You Get For Your Money?
Simon Gosselin/RM Sotheby’s
As far as performance goes, the Essenza SCV12 is one of the craziest machines Lamborghini has ever built. Like the Aventador, it uses a 6.5-liter V12, although it’s been upgraded to deliver 819 hp.
The car rides on a bespoke carbon fiber monocoque that meets FIA Le Mans Hypercar safety standards and is 20 percent stiffer than a Huracan GT3 Evo. Aerodynamics are just as dramatic, led by a towering rear wing with uprights mounted directly to the chassis.
Simon Gosselin/RM Sotheby’s
This isn’t the only Essenza SCV12 on sale that’s listed for well under its original MSRP. Ferrari of Fort Lauderdale currently has an all-black example in its inventory, which only has delivery miles. It has an asking price of $1,999,900.
What lesson can be learned from this? Even with rarity, performance, and pedigree on its side, a limited-run Lamborghini does not always guarantee the kind of appreciation collectors expect. Go take a look at the listing at RM Sotheby’s here and see where you land on the idea of owning one.
