Broad Arrow Amelia Island 2026

Broad Arrow Amelia Island 2026: Record-Breaking $111 Million Auction Shatters Amelia Island History

Broad Arrow Amelia Island

The Broad Arrow Amelia 2026 auction has officially rewritten the record books. Held March 6–7, 2026, at The Ritz-Carlton on Amelia Island, Florida, the Broad Arrow Amelia Concours Auction delivered a staggering total of more than $111 million in sales with a 92% sell-through rate, making it the highest-grossing auction in the 31-year history of The Amelia Concours and Broad Arrow’s most successful sale since its founding in 2021. Of the 179 lots offered, 165 found new owners amid fierce bidding from more than 1,000 registered bidders representing 23 countries.

The Broad Arrow Amelia Island results reflected a collector car market firing on all cylinders, with passionate bidding across nearly every category – from modern hypercars to pre-war classics. A total of 13 new world auction record prices were set during the two-day event, underscoring the extraordinary depth of demand.

A $15.2 Million Ferrari Enzo Leads the Charge

The undisputed star of the Broad Arrow Amelia 2026 sale was a single-owner 2003 Ferrari Enzo finished in rare Nero D.S. (Lot 182), which commanded a final price of $15,185,000 to become the top-selling lot of the entire auction. This stunning black Enzo was a U.S.-specification example showing just 450 miles on the odometer, making it one of the most pristine Enzos ever offered at public auction. It marked the second-highest price ever paid for an Enzo at auction, trailing only the $17,875,000 yellow example sold at Mecum Kissimmee earlier in 2026.

The Enzo was part of a headline-grabbing private collection of five meticulously maintained super and hypercars that crossed the block on Friday evening, igniting bidding wars that resulted in world record prices for all five vehicles.

Porsche Carrera GT Doubles Its Own Record

One of the most electrifying moments of the Broad Arrow Amelia 2026 auction came when a Paint-to-Sample Gulf Blue 2005 Porsche Carrera GT (Lot 184) sold for $6,715,000 – more than doubling the model’s previous auction record. This singular example, limitation number 0555, is the only Carrera GT ever specified in Gulf Blue over Ascot Brown leather and is one of 644 U.S.-specification cars produced.

Offered without reserve, the bidding opened with a bold $5,000,000 statement bid and climbed rapidly as multiple bidders in the room and on the phones competed for the ultimate analog supercar of the 2000s. The result was all the more remarkable given that the Porsche Carrera GT model record stood at just $2,200,000 as recently as late 2025.

1972 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV Sets New Standard

Saturday’s auction was headlined by a largely original, time-capsule 1972 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV (Lot 225), which had been cherished by a single private collector for more than half a century. Estimated to sell for $3,500,000–$4,000,000, the bidding far exceeded expectations as enthusiastic back-and-forth between room and phone bidders pushed the final price to $6,605,000 – exceeding the previous auction record for any Miura by more than $1,700,000.

The Miura is one of only 13 “split-sump” U.S.-market examples with factory air conditioning and had covered fewer than 18,300 miles from new. It now stands as the second-highest price ever paid for any Lamborghini at public auction.

World Records Across Every Category

The 13 new world records set at the Broad Arrow Amelia 2026 auction spanned modern collectibles, classic supercars, and even unexpected categories. A 1988 Porsche 959 Sport (Lot 183) sold for $5,505,000 to become the most expensive non-competition 959 ever sold at public auction, while a 2021 Ferrari Monza SP2 (Lot 181) – the first ever offered publicly in the United States – achieved $4,955,000. A 2017 Ferrari F12tdf in a bespoke Azzurro California Tailor Made specification brought $4,185,000 after a spirited five-way bidding battle, and a 2015 Porsche 918 Spyder set a new record for non-Weissach models at $2,975,000.

Additional world records were set for models including the 1958 Ferrari 250 GT Ellena Coupe ($984,000), the 2015 Ferrari 458 Speciale ($912,500), the 2017 Dodge Viper ($577,500), and the 2004 Ferrari 360 Challenge Stradale ($775,000).

Top Ten Most Expensive Cars Sold at Broad Arrow Amelia 2026

  1. 2003 Ferrari Enzo – $15,185,000
  2. 2005 Porsche Carrera GT – $6,715,000 (World Record)
  3. 1972 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV – $6,605,000 (World Record)
  4. 1988 Porsche 959 Sport – $5,505,000 (World Record)
  5. 2021 Ferrari Monza SP2 – $4,955,000 (World Record)
  6. 2017 Ferrari F12tdf – $4,185,000 (World Record)
  7. 1990 Ferrari F40 – $3,800,000
  8. 1967 Ferrari 275 GTB/4 – $3,415,000
  9. 2015 Porsche 918 Spyder – $2,975,000 (World Record)
  10. 1968 Lamborghini Miura P400 – $2,145,000

Note: This list does not include cars sold after crossing the auction block.

A Record-Setting Amelia Island Weekend

The Broad Arrow Amelia Island results were part of a larger record-setting weekend for collector car auctions in northeast Florida. When combined with Gooding Christie’s Amelia Island sale, which took place March 5–6 and generated $72,132,800 with a 94% sell-through rate, the overall Amelia Car Week auction totals were nothing short of extraordinary. The combined results confirmed Amelia Island’s position as one of the world’s premier destinations for collector car sales.

“Our 2026 Amelia Concours Auction was truly remarkable,” said Barney Ruprecht, Vice President of Auctions for Broad Arrow. “These results further illustrate the strength of the collector car market across nearly all segments, with fervent bidding for these passion-driven assets on both sale days”.

What the Results Mean for the Collector Car Market

The Broad Arrow Amelia Island 2026 results signal a collector car market that continues to gain momentum, particularly for meticulously specified modern supercars. The fact that a Porsche Carrera GT could more than double its auction record in a matter of weeks (if that), or that a Lamborghini Miura could surpass its previous benchmark by $1.7 million, suggests that collectors are willing to pay significant premiums for the rarest, best-provenance examples.

Next on Broad Arrow’s calendar is the 2026 Air|Water auction on April 25 at the Orange County Fairgrounds, featuring more than 60 Porsches, followed by the Concorso d’Eleganza Villa d’Este Auction on May 16–17 in Italy. If the Broad Arrow Amelia Island results are any indication, the rest of 2026 promises to be an exceptional year for the collector car world.