Bonhams Greenwich 2026 Auction Results

Bonhams Greenwich 2026 Auction Results: Top Sales from the Annual Concours Event

The Bonhams Greenwich 2026 auction wrapped up on May 31 at the W.R. Berkley Corporation headquarters in Greenwich, Connecticut – the only Northeast sale on Bonhams|Cars‘ 2026 calendar. Running alongside the Greenwich Concours d’Élégance, the sale offered 52 lots and posted an 85% sell-through rate. No car exceeded its top pre-sale estimate, but two rare 1957 Porsche 356s dominated the results.

What Sold at Bonhams Greenwich 2026

Fifteen lots sold within pre-sale estimate ranges, and several no-reserve consignments changed hands below expectations. The biggest story of the day was a pair of 1957 Porsche 356As that accounted for the top two results of the entire sale.

Bonhams Greenwich 2026 Top Seller

The highest price of the day went to a 1957 Porsche 356A 1500 Carrera GT, which hammered at $511,000 against a pre-sale estimate of $500,000-$700,000.

Bonhams Greenwich 2026 Porsche 356A Project Car

What made this result stand out was the car’s condition – it was offered as something of an incomplete restoration, with a temporary engine powering it and the permanent engine not even being numbers-matching. Bonhams handled the consignment expertly, and the car’s documented history of period Cuban racing competition in 1958 drove strong bidder interest. Achieving $511,000 for an unfinished Carrera GT is a win for Bonhams and a compelling data point for the broader Porsche 356 auction market.

Bonhams Greenwich 2026 Porsche 356A T1 Speedster

The second top result was the 1957 Porsche 356A T1 Speedster by Reutter, which sold for $291,000 – within its $250,000-$300,000 estimate.

Porsche 356A T1 Speedster sold at Bonhams Greenwich 2026

Recent comparable sales put this result in context:

  • RM Sotheby’s Monterey 2025 – 1957 Porsche 356A 1600 Speedster sold for $423,000 (fully restored, award-winning)
  • Bring a Trailer, April 2026 – 1957 Porsche 356A Speedster hammered at $491,000 (no reserve)

The $291,000 Greenwich result likely reflects the car’s condition and T1 specification rather than any softness in the market. For a buyer willing to invest in a proper restoration, this could prove to be strong value – fully restored T1 Speedsters are consistently trading at $400,000-$500,000 and above.

Notable Non-Sale: 1991 Lamborghini Diablo

The 1991 Lamborghini Diablo – one of the most promoted lots ahead of the sale – failed to sell, with bidding falling short of its $300,000-$350,000 reserve. It was one of the more high-profile passes of the day and a reminder that even headline-worthy consignments are not immune to buyer selectivity in today’s market.

Bonhams Greenwich 2026: Key Takeaways

The Bonhams Greenwich 2026 sale reflected a measured collector car market heading into mid-year. Demand is present, but buyers are disciplined – no car exceeded its high estimate, and the liberal use of no-reserve consignments exposed some sellers to below-expectation results.

For Porsche 356 collectors specifically, the two results from Greenwich provide useful benchmarks ahead of the major Monterey Car Week 2026 auctions in August. The Carrera GT’s $511,000 sale – even in its imperfect condition – reaffirms the model’s enduring desirability at the top of the 356 market.