How to Check Ferrari Service History (2026 Guide)

Check a used Ferrari's service history online. How Ferrari logs dealer servicing, what the Power warranty and Classiche certification cover.

F

FindServiceHistory · Vehicle History Experts

Published 23 June 2026

Check Service History

Official dealer records, delivered in minutes

No charge unless we find records

Written by FindServiceHistory

Related reading

How to Check Dodge Service History (2026 Guide)

Check a used Dodge's service history online. How Stellantis holds records for imported and legacy Dodge models, plus Challenger and Ram service tips.

How to Check Chrysler Service History (2026 Guide)

Check a used Chrysler's service history online. How Stellantis holds Chrysler records after UK withdrawal, plus 300C and Voyager service tips.

How to Check Infiniti Service History (2026 Guide)

Check a used Infiniti's service history online. How Nissan systems still hold Infiniti records after UK withdrawal, plus Q30, QX30 and Q50 service tips.

How to Check Your Ferrari Service History (Step by Step)

There are a few ways to confirm a Ferrari's history, and the right one depends on whether you own the car. If you're buying, an independent check by registration is the fastest way to get a dealer-record baseline before you commit.

  1. MyFerrari app and portal: it gives current owners service reminders and connected services, but it's owner-facing only — a buyer or seller can't use it to see a car they don't own.
  2. Ask a franchised Ferrari dealer: any authorised Ferrari dealer can look up the factory record by VIN; a full history report may carry a fee.
  3. Run an independent check by registration: enter the reg on FindServiceHistory for an instant result — it's £9.99, your card is only charged if records are found, and the full DVSA MOT history is included free.
  4. Review the report: check the service dates, mileages and dealer names, look for gaps that affect Ferrari Power or Classiche eligibility, and cross-check the mileages against the MOT history.

Understanding Ferrari Service History in the UK

Ferrari is a brand where service history isn't just important — it's central to the car's identity and value. A used Ferrari with unbroken official service history through authorised Ferrari dealers (and, for older cars, Ferrari Classiche certification) trades at a significant premium over equivalent examples with gaps. The difference can easily amount to tens of thousands of pounds on classic models.

This guide covers how Ferrari records service history, the role of the Ferrari Power extended warranty, what Classiche certification means for older cars, and how to verify a used Ferrari's history before you buy.

Ferrari UK: The Authorised Network

Ferrari operates a small, tightly-controlled UK dealer network. The authorised Ferrari dealers handle sales, service, and warranty work; independent Ferrari specialists exist alongside the official network but only work performed at authorised dealers populates the factory service record.

Service records are logged centrally by Ferrari itself in the factory systems — a Ferrari's history can be traced back through any authorised dealer worldwide, and is available to Ferrari S.p.A. directly.

How Ferrari Records Service History

A Ferrari service record captures date, mileage, authorised dealer, service type, recall/campaign work, all software updates (engine, transmission, chassis control), and detailed advisories. For each major service, Ferrari dealers typically prepare comprehensive documentation including inspection photography, detailed notes, and recommendations — a level of detail well beyond volume-brand records.

Independent specialist work, even by respected Ferrari specialists, does not appear in the factory record. This is a particular consideration on older Ferraris (pre-2000s, classic models) where the specialist network handles substantial volumes of work.

Ferrari Power and Service History

The Ferrari Power extended warranty programme allows owners to extend the factory warranty up to 15 years from first registration, provided service work continues at authorised dealers. This makes the service record directly tied to warranty eligibility:

  • Cars with unbroken authorised-dealer history retain Ferrari Power coverage.
  • Gaps in the dealer record break the Power programme eligibility until reinstated through an inspection and catch-up service (which can be expensive).
  • For used buyers, a Power-eligible Ferrari is considerably more valuable than an equivalent car without.

Ferrari Classiche: Certification for Older Cars

For Ferraris older than 20 years (and for select younger high-value models), Ferrari Classiche certification confirms originality and correctness to factory specification. A Classiche-certified Ferrari carries a bronze, silver, or gold certificate from the factory authenticating that the car retains its major original components (chassis, engine, transmission, bodywork).

Certification involves an inspection at an authorised Classiche workshop. A Ferrari with current Classiche certification trades at a significant premium over equivalent non-certified cars. Service history is central to the certification process — documented authorised-dealer work through the car's life supports the certification.

How to Access Ferrari Service History Records

Via an Authorised Ferrari Dealer

Any Ferrari authorised dealer can look up the factory service history by VIN. For used-purchase inquiries, dealers routinely prepare detailed history reports — and cars offered under Ferrari Approved (CPO) programmes include comprehensive inspection documentation.

Via MyFerrari

The MyFerrari app and online portal provide current owners with service reminders and connected services on supported models. Owner-facing only.

Via FindServiceHistory

For independent pre-purchase verification alongside the dealer report, run a FindServiceHistory check by registration — we retrieve the manufacturer dealer record alongside the DVSA MOT history.

Check Ferrari service history

Retrieve official Ferrari dealership service records using just a registration number. Results typically arrive within minutes.

Run a Service History Check — £9.99

No charge unless we find records

Ferrari Service Intervals

  • Annual service: All modern Ferraris follow annual servicing regardless of mileage — Ferrari schedules assume low annual mileage by volume-car standards.
  • Major service: Typically every 3 years or 40,000–50,000 km (whichever first).
  • Cambelt (where fitted): Older V8 Ferraris (F355, 360, 430, California – early) used a cambelt with a specific engine-out service. Current flat-plane V8s and V12s are chain-driven. Documented cambelt changes on older V8s are a major value item — a neglected cambelt service can cost as much as the difference in value between a full-history and no-history example.
  • Brake fluid: Every 2 years.
  • Tyres and brakes: Ferrari-specified items; pads and discs are often high-performance / carbon-ceramic; documented replacement history is important.

Popular Ferrari Models and Service Considerations

Modern V8: 488, F8, SF90

Chain-driven twin-turbo V8s with extensive electronics. Service history should show consistent annual visits and major services at intervals. On SF90 hybrid, high-voltage system checks and battery coolant are additional items.

V12: 812, 812 GTS, Purosangue

Ferrari's flagship twelve-cylinder models. The Purosangue (launched 2023) is Ferrari's first SUV and brings additional complexity. Full dealer history is expected at these price points.

Classic V8 (360, F430, California early)

Cambelt-driven engines; documented engine-out cambelt services are critical. Ferrari specialists can also carry out this work well, but for the factory record the visits need to be authorised-dealer.

Older (Testarossa, 550 Maranello, 575M, etc.)

Pre-2000s Ferraris have mixed digital/paper records. Classiche certification becomes particularly relevant on these cars. A car with Classiche + documented authorised service history trades at a commanding premium.

Limitations of Ferrari's Service Records

  • Specialist-heavy on older models: Independent Ferrari specialists handle substantial volumes of older-car work; that doesn't appear in the factory record.
  • Concours cars: Very low-mileage concours or collector examples may have service records dominated by storage, start-up, and fluid-change visits rather than mileage- driven services.
  • Track-day use: Many modern Ferraris see track use; this isn't captured in the service record but is often visible in brake / tyre / consumable patterns.

How to Verify a Used Ferrari's Service History

  1. Start with a FindServiceHistory check for the dealer-record baseline.
  2. Request a full authorised-dealer history report— standard practice on any used Ferrari at these price points.
  3. Check Ferrari Power eligibility and Classiche certification status where relevant.
  4. Verify cambelt service on belt-driven V8s.
  5. Cross-reference MOT mileage using our MOT history guide.

Ferrari Service History: Key Takeaways

On a Ferrari, service history isn't optional — it's the mechanism that keeps warranty coverage active (Ferrari Power), keeps the car certified (Classiche, where applicable), and keeps the market valuation where it should be. Independent-only histories can still work, but they come with measurable value penalty compared to factory-authorised equivalents.

See the Ferrari manufacturer page for coverage detail. Start with a FindServiceHistory check.

Check Ferrari service history

Retrieve official Ferrari dealership service records using just a registration number. Results typically arrive within minutes.

Run a Service History Check — £9.99

No charge unless we find records

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I check my Ferrari service history online?
Enter the Ferrari's UK registration on FindServiceHistory. We retrieve the manufacturer dealer record and return the servicing logged at authorised Ferrari dealers, with dates, mileages and dealer details. It costs £9.99 and your card is only charged if records are found. Full DVSA MOT history is included free, giving you an independent baseline before the dealer report.
Can I check my Ferrari service history for free?
The MyFerrari app and portal give current owners service reminders and connected services, but it's owner-facing only, so buyers and sellers can't use it to see a car they don't own. An independent check by registration costs £9.99 with no charge if no records are found, useful as a first verification step alongside a full dealer report.
Where is Ferrari service history stored?
Ferrari logs service records centrally in its own factory systems, so a car's history can be traced through any authorised Ferrari dealer worldwide and is available to Ferrari S.p.A. directly. Only work performed at authorised dealers populates this factory record; respected independent Ferrari specialists do excellent work, but it doesn't appear in the official history.
Can I check Ferrari service history by VIN or registration?
Our lookup uses the UK registration and resolves the VIN behind the scenes, so you only need the plate. Authorised Ferrari dealers query the factory record by VIN. For older or classic Ferraris where specialist work is common, expect the factory record to be only part of the picture and combine it with the dealer report.
How do Ferrari Power and Classiche affect service history?
The Ferrari Power extended warranty can run up to 15 years from first registration, but only while servicing continues at authorised dealers, so a gap breaks eligibility until an inspection and catch-up service reinstate it. For cars over 20 years old, Classiche certification confirms originality, and documented authorised-dealer history supports it. Both make full factory history directly valuable.
How can I check a used Ferrari's service history before buying?
Start with a check on the registration for the dealer-record baseline, then request a full authorised-dealer history report, standard at these price points. Confirm Ferrari Power eligibility and Classiche status where relevant, verify cambelt service on belt-driven V8s like the 360 or F430, and cross-reference the free MOT mileage for consistency.