At Ferrari, the phrase “special project” usually means something expensive, dramatic, and just a little bit unhinged. But the new Ferrari HC25 might be one of the most significant One-Off creations the company has ever signed off on—not because of outrageous horsepower or hybrid wizardry, but because it quietly marks the end of an era.

Unveiled during Ferrari Racing Days at Circuit of the Americas, the HC25 is a bespoke creation from Ferrari’s ultra-exclusive Special Projects program, designed for a single client with enough influence—and presumably enough money—to ask Maranello for something entirely unique. Underneath, it’s based on the Ferrari F8 Spider, inheriting that car’s mid-engine layout, aluminum chassis, and thunderous twin-turbocharged 3.9-liter V-8. But visually, philosophically, and emotionally, the HC25 is aiming somewhere far beyond a rebodied F8.
This is Ferrari closing the book on the non-hybrid mid-engine V-8 spider.
And it’s doing so with a flourish.
Penned by the Ferrari Design Studio under chief design officer Flavio Manzoni, the HC25 looks less like a derivative special edition and more like a concept car that somehow escaped onto the road. Ferrari describes it as a bridge between the company’s past and future, linking the iconic V-8 berlinettas of old with the sharper, more theatrical design language now seen on the Ferrari F80 and Ferrari 12Cilindri.
That future-facing ambition is obvious the moment you see the car. The HC25 abandons the softer elegance of the F8 Spider in favor of something more architectural and aggressive. Its body is organized around a dramatic dual-volume structure, visually splitting the front and rear sections with a glossy black central ribbon that wraps through the entire car. Ferrari says the element serves functional cooling duties, channeling air to radiators and extracting heat from the powertrain, but visually it’s the defining gesture of the design.

The effect is striking. From the side, the black band slices forward from the rear haunches, rises vertically over the doors, then loops back toward the rear glass in one uninterrupted movement. It gives the HC25 an almost cab-forward stance despite the engine sitting squarely behind the seats. Even the door handles are hidden inside a sculpted aluminum blade that bridges the bodywork like an aerodynamic spine.
Ferrari’s designers also worked hard to reduce the visual weight of the cabin. The glazing is minimized, the shoulder line lowered, and the surfaces are cleaner than what we’ve seen on recent road-going Ferraris. There’s still plenty of sensuality in the sheetmetal—the muscular rear fenders remain unmistakably Ferrari—but the overall execution feels tighter, sharper, and more futuristic.
Then there are the lights.

The HC25 receives completely bespoke headlamp units using hardware never before seen on a Ferrari road car. Up front, ultra-thin lenses incorporate vertically arranged daytime running lights shaped like boomerangs along the leading edges of the front fenders. Around back, split taillights mirror the same graphic theme, giving the car an unusually cohesive visual identity. It’s the kind of detail you’d normally expect to see disappear during production engineering, except this is production engineering—just for one customer.
The paintwork follows the same philosophy. Ferrari finished the body in a matte Moonlight Grey while the central ribbon remains gloss black, creating a contrast that exaggerates the car’s layered surfacing. Yellow accents on the badges and brake calipers inject just enough classic Ferrari theater without overwhelming the otherwise restrained palette.
Inside, the same grey-and-yellow theme continues with technical fabrics and geometric graphics echoing the shapes of the exterior lighting. The wheels deserve their own paragraph: five-spoke units with diamond-finished outer rims and recessed channels designed to visually enlarge their diameter. It sounds like the sort of design detail only Italians would obsess over, and naturally, it works beautifully.

Mechanically, Ferrari wisely resisted the temptation to reinvent anything. The HC25 retains the F8 Spider’s magnificent twin-turbo V-8, producing 720 horsepower and 568 pound-feet of torque through a seven-speed dual-clutch transmission. Peak power arrives at 7000 rpm, torque hits at 3250 rpm, and the engine still spins to 8000 rpm—numbers that already feel nostalgic in an increasingly electrified supercar landscape.
Performance remains predictably absurd: 0–62 mph in 2.9 seconds, 0–124 mph in 8.2, and a top speed of 211 mph. Those figures no longer dominate the hypercar conversation, but that misses the point entirely. The HC25 isn’t about chasing numbers. It’s about preserving a feeling.
Because while Ferrari’s future undoubtedly belongs to hybridization, electrification, and increasingly complex performance systems, the HC25 reminds us what made the company’s mid-engine V-8 cars so intoxicating in the first place. Compact dimensions. Dramatic proportions. Turbocharged violence. And a sense that the entire car exists purely to celebrate the engine sitting inches behind your spine.

As one-off Ferraris go, the HC25 isn’t merely an indulgent vanity project. It feels more like a rolling epilogue—a final love letter to the pure internal-combustion V-8 spider before Maranello moves on to whatever comes next.
Source: Ferrari