Recently Viewed

Saved

FERRARI 330 GT RECENTLY SOLD: WHAT THE MARKET TELLS YOU — AND WHAT COMES NEXT

1967 Ferrari 330 GT 22 buyer Alex Manos

Researching Ferrari 330 GT recently sold results? Auction databases, private sale reports, and enthusiast forums tell a consistent story: the 330 series occupies a respected position in the Maranello hierarchy — a genuine Ferrari with genuine provenance, built during the marque’s most consequential decade.

What those recently sold figures don’t tell you is what you’ll actually net after fees, time, and the friction of selling a car at this level. That gap between hammer price and realized outcome is where most sellers find the real decision lives.

We buy Ferrari 330s directly — 330 GT 2+2s, 330 GTCs, 330 GTSs, running cars and projects, documented originals and complicated histories. If an offer is made and agreed to, we provide immediate payment and handle the transaction logistics.

Call Beverly Hills Car Club: 310-975-0272

We Buy Ferrari 330 Any Condition

My proposition is direct: fair market pricing based on current transaction data, fast execution on your timeline, and clean handling of whatever complications your specific car presents. I’m not promising the highest conceivable outcome. I’m offering a conclusive one.

For sellers who have done their research — and if you’re comparing Ferrari 330 GT recently sold results, you have — this is the context that matters most. Top dollar paid and immediate transactions fulfill everyone’s priorities, without the overhead of routes that take months to deliver outcomes that aren’t guaranteed.

Why Our Process is #1

I’ve been buying significant classics since 2004, operating out of Los Angeles under the Beverly Hills Car Club. The business began with Italian and European sports cars and has grown through a straightforward reputation: fair offers, no renegotiation after agreement, no lowball tactics designed to manufacture urgency.

My team works across 48 continental states and Hawaii. We’ve purchased thousands of cars across makes, models, and conditions — estate sales where cars have sat untouched for decades, divorce situations requiring neutral third-party assessment, storage lien complications, title issues spanning multiple states, and projects in every stage of completion and disassembly. Ferrari 330s appear regularly in that mix, across all variants and condition levels.

What I won’t do: offer a number and revise it downward once you’ve committed. I won’t manufacture problems during a pre-purchase review to justify a lower payment. If I’m making an offer, it reflects what I’m willing to pay for the car as represented. If I’m not making an offer, I’ll tell you that directly rather than waste your time.

classic-ferrari-buy-sell

FERRARI BUYER

NATIONWIDE!

TIME TO SELL? We’re classic FERRARI BUYERS and we want to buy your car, regardless of condition, TODAY! As a premiere collector/dealer with hundreds of vehicles in-stock, we’ll give you the best and fastest deal around: RESTORED, PROJECTS & MORE!

Understanding the Ferrari 330 Family

The 330 designation refers to the displacement of each individual cylinder — 330cc — across a 4.0-liter V12, the natural evolution of the 3.0-liter 250 series engine that preceded it. Ferrari produced the 330 family across several distinct body configurations between 1963 and 1968, and the market treats each as its own conversation.

330 GT 2+2 (1963–1967): The most produced of the 330 family, with approximately 1,000 examples built across two series. Series I cars (1963–1965) carried the controversial four-headlight nose that divided opinion at the time and remains a polarizing aesthetic today. Series II cars (1965–1967) adopted a cleaner two-headlight front treatment and are broadly preferred by the market — typically commanding a 10–15% premium over equivalent Series I examples. Both share the Colombo-derived 4.0-liter V12 producing around 300 horsepower, a five-speed gearbox, and the Pininfarina coachwork that gives the 2+2 its grand touring character.

The 2+2 designation is accurate in a period context — rear seat accommodations exist, though they’re honest about their limitations. These are genuinely usable Ferraris. Long-distance capable, mechanically characterful, and carrying Maranello provenance at a more accessible price point than the rarer closed-body variants.

330 GTC (1966–1968): The coupe version, with approximately 600 built, represents the more focused expression of the 330 platform. Same 4.0-liter V12, same five-speed gearbox, but in a two-seat Pininfarina body widely regarded as one of the cleanest designs of the period. The GTC occupies a clear premium tier above the 2+2 — typically 40–60% higher for comparable condition and documentation — owing to lower production, the dedicated two-seat configuration, and stronger collector demand.

330 GTS (1966–1968): The open spider version, with approximately 100 examples produced, carries the scarcest production numbers in the family and the market reflects this accordingly. A well-documented, matching-numbers GTS in driver-quality condition operates in a meaningfully different price tier than its closed siblings. Spider premiums are real and consistent in this segment.

What drives value within each variant: Matching numbers are the starting point. Original engine (confirmed by Ferrari Classiche certification or credible documentation), gearbox, and rear axle with continuous provenance represent the foundation every serious buyer examines first. A matching-numbers 330 GTC with documentation commands 25–35% more than a mechanically identical car with replacement components, often more depending on how complete the paper trail is.

Ferrari Classiche certification — Ferrari’s own factory authentication program — has become a significant value driver for cars where it can be obtained. A certified car with the Red Book carries demonstrable premium and eliminates the uncertainty that shadows undocumented examples. If your car has been through Classiche, that certification is a primary asset in any sale.

Color and specification originality: Factory color combinations, correct interior trim codes, original instrumentation, and unmodified body structure increasingly separate market-leading examples from the field. The buyer pool for 330s has matured, and incorrect restorations or non-factory color changes are now priced for what they are — cars requiring additional work to reach their proper presentation.

Ownership history and documentation continuity: A car that has passed through three careful owners with complete service records commands more than an identical car with a gap-filled history. Invoices, service records, and ownership documentation accumulate into a narrative that buyers are willing to pay for.

What Ferrari 330 GT Recently Sold Data Actually Shows You — and What It Doesn’t

When you research Ferrari 330 GT recently sold results, you’re looking at hammer prices — the number the auctioneer called when the bidding stopped, before any deductions. What that figure doesn’t reflect is the seller’s realized outcome after fees.

The auction route for a Ferrari 330 delivers real exposure to a real buyer pool. Major auction houses present these cars well, catalog them professionally, and draw qualified international bidders. Under ideal circumstances — correct car, right catalog position, competitive bidding environment — you might achieve 10–15% above current strong retail.

The math on that outcome: a $180,000 hammer price carries a seller’s commission of 10–12% at most major houses, plus transport to the auction facility at $2,500–$4,500, plus insurance during the consignment period. If bidding stalls below reserve, you’ve spent two to four months and several thousand dollars with zero sale to show for it.

Private sale offers control and direct conversation with buyers. Some sellers value this — negotiating personally, speaking directly with the next steward, managing the process on their own terms. It is also genuinely time-consuming. A significant Ferrari at this price point requires patient management of inquiries, multiple qualified viewings, pre-purchase inspection coordination, and negotiation that typically opens 15–20% below asking.

Direct sale to me trades theoretical ceiling for certainty. If an offer is made and agreed to, payment wires immediately. Paperwork handles remotely or in person as you prefer. The process from agreement to completion runs days, not months. No fees deducted, no reserve risk, no failed inspections that resurrect dead negotiations.

What Happens Next

If you’re considering selling your Ferrari 330, what I need is straightforward: clear photos of the exterior from all angles in decent light, interior condition, engine bay, undercarriage if accessible, any rust or corrosion areas, and any documentation you have — title, service records, Classiche certification, ownership history.

Include the chassis number, and share whatever ownership context you’re comfortable with: how long you’ve owned it, how it’s been stored and used, what major work has been done, what issues you’re aware of.

I review materials and respond within 24–48 hours, typically sooner. If I’m making an offer, it’s a specific number with clear reasoning — not a range, not contingent on an in-person inspection, not subject to revision once you’ve agreed.

If an offer is made and agreed to, payment wires same day or next business day. Logistics coordinate around your schedule. The process from agreement to completion typically runs five to seven days.

No pressure, no urgency tactics. When you’re ready to move forward, email photos and the chassis number. I’ll respond with clarity and a real number, and we’ll take it from there.

Why Choose Beverly Hills Car Club?

Beverly Hills Car Club has been a trusted name in classic car buying since 2004. We offer fair market valuations, immediate payment, and free nationwide pickup. Whether your Ferrari 330 is a pristine concours example, a documented original, or a project in progress, we have the expertise to assess it accurately and make a genuine offer. No hidden fees, no manufactured delays — just a clean, professional transaction on your timeline.

Classic-Ferrari-Buyer
1982 Ferrari 308GTSi
Bert L.
1982 Ferrari 308GTSi
April 10, 2021

“They were so efficient in every way and I couldn’t believe that they paid for my Ferrari in advance without seeing or driving my baby!”

1990 Ferrari 348TS
David P.
1990 Ferrari 348TS
March 30, 2021

“Spoke with Alex about my baby (1990 Ferrari) he was just the very best. Counseled me on my car and value and within a day we had an agreement. The funds were transferred as agreed. The gentleman he sent to pick up the car was as gracious as Alex. Can’t say enough positive about Alex.”

1978 Ferrari 308GTS
Xavier R.
1978 Ferrari 308GTS
March 12, 2021

“That’s the third car I bought from BCC with Gevik and all is perfect.”

1982 Ferrari 308GTS
Ron H.
1982 Ferrari 308GTS
March 7, 2021

“I contacted Alex yesterday and he promptly called me back. He asked me a few questions, asked for pictures and we negotiated a fair price. We made a deal and he followed through on everything. He sent a flatbed and picked up the car the next day with no glitches. This is the easiest transaction that I have ever had regarding selling a vehicle. Thank you Alex for all.”

1987 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
Tom G.
1987 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
January 13, 2021

“Alex and Roxana were very professional, prompt & helpful during this experience. All business including shipping was complete in 4 days. Can’t beat that. Thanks!”

1983 Ferrari 308GTS Quattrovalvole
Mike M.
1983 Ferrari 308GTS Quattrovalvole
January 3, 2021

“Adam was very responsive. Thanks!”

1984 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
Rick R.
1984 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
December 1, 2020

“I am working on my second transaction with Gevik. He is great! Very responsive and patient with all my questions.”

1984 Ferrari 308GTB Quattrovalvole Euro Spec
Ricardo S.
1984 Ferrari 308GTB Quattrovalvole Euro Spec
December 1, 2020

“Always there to support my car purchasing needs.”

Glenn M. 1985 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
Glenn M.
1985 Ferrari Mondial Cabriolet
November 24, 2020

“Great communication and information. Very happy customer!”

1981 Ferrari 308 GTSI
Frank C.
1981 Ferrari 308 GTSI
November 21, 2020

“A very smooth and painless transaction. The check for the sale of the car was forthcoming expeditiously. Transport for the car arrived on time and was completed with no damage to the car. An enjoyable experience.”

Selling? Let's Talk!

  • Drop files here or
    Accepted file types: jpg, jpeg, gif, png, pdf, Max. file size: 8 MB, Max. files: 10.
    • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.
    65 330 GT 2+2
    1966 Ferrari 330GT 2 2 buyer
    1966 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Series II 5-Speed side view
    1965 Ferrari 330GT 2+2 Series II buyer Alex Manos
    bhcc-ferrari-collector

    alex manos classic car buyer
    Ferrari 330 buyer

    Recent News:

    Mercedes 560SL buyer Alex Manos
    Ferrari 575 Maranello buyer Alex Manos
    1966 Mercedes 230SL buyer Alex Manos

    Next Steps?

    Call Now

    Or email via our website and we’ll go over all you need to know to sell your classic!

    Send Photos

    Just send a few photos, this is often all we need to make an offer.

    Get Paid!

    You get paid, and then we’ll pick up the vehicle – IT’S THAT SIMPLE!

     

    Sell us your car

    Pick up from any USA location - Any condition - Top $$$ Paid
    • Drop files here or
      Accepted file types: jpg, jpeg, gif, png, pdf, Max. file size: 8 MB, Max. files: 10.
      • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

       
       

      • Drop files here or
        Accepted file types: jpg, jpeg, gif, png, pdf, Max. file size: 8 MB, Max. files: 10.
        • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

        Hand Wave

        Chat With Us!

        Buying or Selling? We Are the Biggest Classic Car Dealership in the World. Let's Talk Today!

        –Owner, Alex Manos

        Chat Now