The number of supercars and hypercars is growing at a fast
clip. That means competition for the most expensive car in the world title is
also growing.
From the Lamborghini Veneno Roadster to the McLaren P1 to the Aston Martin Valkyrie, expensive, high-ticket rarities are crowding the top of the market. Surprisingly, a most expensive car list is not as easy to make as you might think. The prices for the most expensive cars fluctuate depending on customer build requests, which—among the buyers of the world's most expensive cars—can get rather baroque.
From the Lamborghini Veneno Roadster to the McLaren P1 to the Aston Martin Valkyrie, expensive, high-ticket rarities are crowding the top of the market. Surprisingly, a most expensive car list is not as easy to make as you might think. The prices for the most expensive cars fluctuate depending on customer build requests, which—among the buyers of the world's most expensive cars—can get rather baroque.
To assemble the list, we tried to filter out the wide
spectrum of suspect vapor, such as the late Marussia, the Zenvo TS1, and the
Icona Vulcano Titanium, and instead went with cars that have established sales,
something of a history, and at least partially verifiable base
prices—Lamborghini, McLaren, Bugatti, and Pagani, and Koenigsegg, among others.
For the most expensive cars list we looked at cars that come
from unexpected places, such as the Lykan Hypersport, a controversial,
ultra-low-volume speed demon that is the first supercar to emerge from the
Middle East. We also looked at cars that celebrities like Gordon Ramsay have
been coveting. A list like this is also notable for what didn't make the
cut—the Hennessey Venom GT Spyder WRE ($1.3 million), Lamborghini Centenario
($1.8 million), and Aston Martin Vulcan ($2.3 million).
In the end, we decided to go with cars that mixed high
style, an absurd set of performance capabilities, innovative materials and
build techniques, and, of course, an unparalleled price tag.
Christian von Koenigsegg may be the most visionary privateer
builder in the world today. His creations are deeply personal and undeniably
ground-breaking innovations. The many of the most expensive cars in the world,
the price of the changes to match the complexity each customer's demands. The
Regera is built around a 5.0-liter twin-turbo V8 that pumps out 1,100
horsepower. The rest of the drivetrain is a brilliant departure from the norm:
the Regera uses something called the Koenigsegg Direct Drive system, wherein a
small, crank-mounted electric motor is connected to the engine with a hydraulic
coupling and acts as a launch motor.
Then, each of the rear wheels is assigned its own electric
motor the push out around 700 horsepower. Off the line, with the coupling open,
the Regera is a purely electric drive. When the hydraulic coupling closes, the
smaller electric motor fills out the bottom of the torque curve. Few
innovations in the automobile have inspired as much envy as Koenigsegg's drive
system, and that accounts for just a part of the exorbitant cost.
The Ferrari LaFerrari stood out when it was first introduced
at the 2013 Geneva Auto Show, despite the fact that it had to share the floor
with a new Lamborghini Veneno and McLaren P1. It has a top speed of 217 mph,
crushed the track record at Maranello, and goes from 0 to 60 in under two
seconds.
Unveiled at last year's Paris Auto Show, the Ferrari
LaFerrari Aperta is the open-topped version of the fastest production Ferrari
ever made. Literally meaning "open," the Aperta differs from the
hard-top—which was already expensive when it was first sold in 2013 or $1
million apiece—in a few crucial ways.
The Aperta uses the same revolutionary drivetrain to create
around 1,000 horsepower: the mid-rear mounted 6.3-liter Ferrari F140 V12
coupled with its HY-KERS kinetic energy recapture system cribbed from its
Formula 1 car. But the absence of a roof—and a slight increase in weight—has
demanded some critical changes to the car: the Aperta's has a more prominent
front air-dam to boost downforce, its radiators have been angled down to direct
air flow out along the underbody instead of over the hood, and an L-shaped
wedge has been integrated to the upper corner of each windshield a-pillar to
reduce compression on the rear of the cabin. What Ferrari calls
"Butterfly" doors open at a slightly different angle. Also, look for
revised wheel arches.
Ok, so the McLaren P1 GTR isn't on the market any more, and
it never really was to begin with, since McLaren sold it out of the works, and
only 35 were made. It's also a track-only car. You'd think these factors would
take the GTR out of contention. Not so! A track car is still a car, and this
one is a beauty. Built by McLaren works as a 20th anniversary celebration of
McLaren's win at Le Mans and maintained by McLaren Special Operations
department, the P1 GTR was sold only in pounds for £1.9 million.
The 1,000-horsepower P1 GTR is one of the most expensive
cars in the world because it is a McLaren, and a very special one at that. It
features a hybrid drive plucked from the audacious P1 road car, and but it
differs in a variety of ways. Where the P1 has a variety of driving programs
(e-mode, normal, sport, track, and race, as well as an all-out “boost” and
Instant Power Assist System button), the GTR has a stripped down set of
options. It has a fixed ride height on race-ready suspension, a fixed rear wing
capable that can deploy a drag reduction system, and specially-designed exhaust
system. It travels 225 mph at the high end and goes from 0-60 in 2.4
seconds.
When, as legend has it, former VW czar Ferdinand Piech
demanded that Bugatti make the fastest car in the world, the masterminds in
Mulsanne conjured the Veyron, an insectile example of aerospace colliding with
automotive engineering that traveled a laughable 268 mph. Its W-16,
1,001-horsepower engine jacked up the cost to $1.5 million, and the four turbo
wastegates were louder than most modern engines.
Now, the Veyron—once among the most expensive cars in the
world—is gone. In its place, the Bugatti Chiron, an even more expensive
Bugatti. Also faster, more advanced, and more powerful than the Veyron, the
Chiron boasts a similar quad-turbocharged W-16 8.0-liter engine, but it has
tinkered and futzed until the output is now 1,500 horsepower—300 more than even
the Super Sport, the fastest model of the Veyron. The Chiron's top speed has
been limited to just 261 mph on the road; its actual top speed has reportedly
not yet been tested. But the wealthy and wiling are lining up to set the mark.
What makes the Chiron one of the most expensive cars in the
world? It's a Bugatti, it's handmade in an atelier, and no one can agree how to
pronounce its name.
For those among you who didn't think it could get more
extreme that the Pagani Huayra, we give you the Huayra BC, the most expensive
Pagani ever made. The BC stands for Benny Caiola, an Italian investor who may
have owned one of the best collections of Ferraris in the world. Caiola was one
of Horacio Pagani's oldest friends and mentors, and this car takes Pagani's
obsessive approach to detail to even more mental levels.
The BC looks and sounds like the "base" Huayra:
The engine is still sourced from AMG, and remains a 6.0-liter V-12 bi-turbo
that's been tuned by Pagani's demonic shop gnomes to bring you 790 horsepower
and 811 lb-ft of torque. All of this sorcery is run through tripod drive shafts
developed through Le Mans prototype program to the rear wheels by way of a
seven-speed Xtrac transmission. Got that? The transmission itself is controlled
by electro-hydraulic actuation and carbon-fiber synchronizers. Pagani, ever
hungry for carbon fiber.
Here's just one of many ways in which the BC takes flight
from the planet Huarya: Each shift in this dynamic transmission has been tuned
from the standard Huayra 150 milliseconds to the BC's 75. That's taking a fast
shift time and slashing it in half.
Only six of these preposterous Ferraris were ever made. The
very expensive Ferrari Pininfarina Sergio was created in homage to the famed
son of the founder of Pininfarina the year that he died. It was originally
presented as a concept car in 2013, the Sergio grew on Ferrari just enough to
for them to green-light a six-car production run based on the Ferrari 458
Spider.
Thanks to an all-carbon-fiber frame, the hand-made Sergio is
a full 330 pounds lighter than the already waif-like 458. Arranged in a two-seat
configuration, it takes the open-air concept even further. Where the Ferrari
458 Spider has no roof, the Sergio has no roof, no side windows, and
windshield. That makes the force of this naturally-aspirated 4.5-liter F136F V-8 engine—the same one used the 458
Spider—all the more forceful.
There is no announced price for the Aston Martin Valkyrie
yet. But a reliable source said that if we put $3 million, we'd be about right.
This car, until recently known as the Aston Martin-Red Bull AM-RB 001, is a
culmination of sorts of Aston Martin's visionary new president, Andy Palmer,
who has ushered Aston Martin into a new age of solvency and relevance with a
series of killer cars. The Valkrie is the most killer car of all.
Palmer and Red Bull RAcing's Adrian Newey and Christian
Horner agreed to build the car over a pint at a pub (true story). Thus the
partnership was born between Aston and Red Bull Racing's Newey, the
aerodynamicist whose work is largely responsible for Red Bull's multi-year
dominance in Formula One. Newey and Aston Martin invented an aerodynamic scheme
for the Valkyrie that channels air through the chassis and creates downforce
without the help of a wings.
The engine will be a 6.5-liter, naturally-aspirated V-12
tailored to the frame by Cosworth, and was made to achieve the magical 1:1
power-to-weight ratio.
The Valkyrie is not a car for casual buyers of supercars.
Marek Reichman, Aston Martin's designer, said the car—which has a Rimac-built
hybrid battery system installed along with the engine—will make about 1,000
horsepower.
The Veneno Roadster is the most expensive production
Lamborghini on the road today. It's actually $500,000 more expensive than the
coupe version of the Veneno. That's a lot of cash for a little less roof above
your head.
How can you explain a cost well north of $3 million? Look at
the build of this open-top two-seater. The monoque is lifted from the LP700-4
Aventador, except this one is made from carbon-fiber. Atop this is bolted a
740-hp, 6.5-liter V-12 with a seven-speed single-clutch ISR automated manual
transmission—the same one found in the Veneno coupe. It's a tricky
transmission, and one that gets a lot of heat among aficionados. If there's
room for improvement in a car that costs more than a private jet share, the
transmission would be the place. The sprung portion of the Veneno is placed
atop a pushrod-actuated suspension, and even though it's driven by a a full
all-wheel-drive system, the total dry weight of this carbon-fiber gem is just
3,285 pounds.
Built by W Motors, the Lykan HyperPport is legitimately the
first Arab supercar. We know this because W Motors is based in Lebanon, but
also because the HyperSport is reckoned to be the first car to have headlights
with embedded jewels. There are titanium LED blades that have a total of 420
15-karat diamonds. However, according to Lykan, buyers have also selected
rubies, diamonds, yellow diamonds, and sapphires.
The rest of the car? Fine. It's powered by a mid-rear
mounted, twin-turbo 3.8-liter flat-six boxer that fires about 780 horsepower
through the rear wheels. It 0-62 in 2.8 seconds and has a blistering top speed
of 240 mph.
But really: The headlights are made with 240 15-karat
diamonds. And that's what makes this one of the most expensive cars in the
world.
The McLaren P1 LM is the most expensive car in the world in
2017. Go ahead and dispute it, because you can. But first, consider the
caveats: McLaren didn't actually build this car. They built the original P1,
which was then acquired by Lanzante Motorsports, which painstakingly rebuilt
the P1, transforming a near-perfect supercar into a definitive work of art that
will one day be remembered as a crowning achievement of all humanity.
It takes cues from the McLaren P1 GTR [see above] and the
storied McLaren F1 road car. Like the F1, the LM has gold plating in the engine
bay. And the engine which the gold surrounds is a 3.8-liter twin-turbo V-8.
Combined with the three electric motors dispersed between the engine and the
rear wheels, the P1 LM produces a heroic 1000 horsepower.
These details may not distinguish a car on this list, which
has high power standards. The Lanzante distinguishes itself is in how smart it
is. The aerodynamics come to life on track. A modified rear wing and enlarged
front splitter join together with dive planes that generate an astounding 40
percent increase in downforce over the P1 GTR.
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