Ferrari Has Upgraded Its Optional Official Warranty Cover To 15 Years

While Kia might offer a seven-year factory warranty, owners of Ferraris can take advantage of more than double the factory backup thanks to a new extension to the official package that can cover cars of up to 15 years old
Ferrari Has Upgraded Its Optional Official Warranty Cover To 15 Years

Ferrari has announced an extension to its warranty programme that sees owners able to add official backup and cover for major components all the way up until the car turns 16.

The Power15 extension is an add-on to the current multi-part system that lasts up to 12 years from the car’s date of sale. Before the four-year factory warranty expires a fifth year can be added, and then the optional New Power scheme gives cover between the sixth and 12th years. The Power15 element, which picks up from the 13th year, is yours on a rolling 12-monthly basis to be renewed if both the owner wants it and Ferrari is happy to supply it.

Ferrari Has Upgraded Its Optional Official Warranty Cover To 15 Years

What’s even better is that it’s available on any Ferrari up to 15 years old, even if it hasn’t had cover since the factory warranty ran out. Nice. Cars in that position have to pass a few checks before they’ll be granted cover, but you can’t argue with 15-year warranty cover (albeit for a price). That’s more than double what Kia provides, and triple the length of Toyota’s factory support.

There are restrictions, as with any warranty, but the Power15 cover for cars of 13-15 years old includes failures of the engine, gearbox, suspension and steering, and even the FF and GTC4Lusso’s Power Take-off Unit. Not bad.

At the time of writing, cover would be available for Ferraris dating back to 2002, which includes the likes of the 575M Maranello, the 360 and the 456M. Anything newer now has the option of multi-year cover. As for prices, they’ll vary according to the car and mileage but they won’t be cheap.

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Comments

Tomislav Celić

Now that’s warranty

Breaks down when 16 year old.

07/27/2017 - 13:50 |
112 | 4
Chewbacca_buddy (McLaren squad)(VW GTI Clubsport)(McLaren 60

In reply to by Tomislav Celić

07/27/2017 - 14:14 |
64 | 0
Anonymous

These are some big claims from a company that made the 458.
Because, uno, firestarter.

07/27/2017 - 13:51 |
20 | 4
Anonymous

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

And flammable glue

07/27/2017 - 14:30 |
8 | 2
Anonymous

So you can buy an overpriced waranty for a allready overpriced car, while you get it for free on a cheap kia? I think there is something wrong with their concept

07/27/2017 - 14:13 |
2 | 34
Dāvis Kalniņš

In reply to by Anonymous (not verified)

Cheap people don’t buy Ferraris.

07/27/2017 - 14:18 |
48 | 0
Anonymous

That’s nice, as the 360 is the newest Ferrari I’d actually buy…in manual form at least

07/27/2017 - 14:31 |
6 | 2
Fouck hahaha

Recalls coming…

07/27/2017 - 15:11 |
2 | 0
Anonymous

Funny how they made the warranty juusssttt long enough to not have to deal with any 355’s.

07/27/2017 - 17:05 |
30 | 0
lukalukic1

Would be much more fun if it was for Range Rover haha 😂

07/27/2017 - 20:36 |
0 | 0
JakeB

I’d like to think they’ll offer something relatively sensible for owners who would like to actually drive their cars more than 500 miles a year. I have a feeling that won’t be the case.

07/28/2017 - 02:07 |
0 | 0
Anonymous

Doug Demuro should not have sold his 360 Modena

07/28/2017 - 12:54 |
4 | 0