1964 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Series 1

1964 Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 Series 1

Pininfarina elegance, a Colombo V12 and Enzo's own daily driver: the grand tourer Ferrari built to cross continents.

The Ferrari 330 GT 2+2 in a few figures:

  • 4.0 V12 (Colombo Type 209)
  • 300 hp
  • 245 km/h
  • approx. 6 s
  • about 1,000 (625 Series 1)
  • €268,450
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Written by Rob Van Loock

23/06/2026

Ferrari built this to cross continents, and Enzo liked it enough to drive one himself

The first thing that hits you is the design. Penned by the masters at Pininfarina, the 330 GT 2+2 is so well proportioned that you might not even clock it as a four-seater. A long bonnet with quad headlights hides the Colombo V12, three gills sit in the flanks, the A-pillars are wonderfully thin, and the coupe roofline flows into a big, round tail that hides a proper boot. This was Ferrari's grand tourer for people who actually wanted to travel, and Enzo Ferrari himself reportedly used one as his personal daily driver.

Design: a 2+2 that hides it well

The 330 GT 2+2 replaced the iconic 250 GTE 2+2, and Ferrari stretched the body by 50mm to free up real legroom in the back. Yet none of that practicality shows from the outside. The Series 1 is defined by its quad headlights, a layout Ferrari chose specifically to charm American buyers, and it made its debut at the Brussels Motor Show. More than sixty years on it still looks effortless, the kind of shape that needs no wings, vents or drama to command a room.

Interior: teak, leather and electric windows

Inside, the years have been kind. Everything is trimmed in leather, and even after six decades this example still presents beautifully. The dashboard is finished in a gorgeous teak wood, simple and elegant, and it must have felt impossibly luxurious in period. There is a large steering wheel, which you quickly learn to appreciate given there is no power steering, and the seats are genuinely comfortable. It even has electrically operated windows, a real touch of class for the era.

Chassis: built for the long road

Underneath sits the classic Ferrari tubular chassis of the day, with independent front suspension and a solid leaf-sprung rear axle. It is a setup that prioritises comfort, and it shows: this is a car you could point at the far side of Europe without a second thought. Everything about it says long-distance grand tourer rather than back-road scratcher.

The Colombo V12: the masterpiece

The heart of the car is the Colombo V12, one of the most celebrated and longest-running engine designs in motoring history. Here it appears as the 4.0-litre Type 209, based on the short-block design but lengthened with wider bore centres for better cooling. The 330 name comes from the 330cc displacement of each individual cylinder. It produces 300 hp, good for a 245 km/h top speed and 0 to 100 km/h in around 6 seconds, figures that were seriously rapid in the mid-1960s and still feel brisk today.

Driving: it does not like going slow

Turn the key and the V12 fires effortlessly, settling into that deep, unmistakable rumble. Then it makes its character clear: this car does not enjoy dawdling. In true Italian fashion it wants to be driven quickly, leaning into its stride the harder you press on. Power runs through a four-speed gearbox with overdrive and a mechanical clutch. The throw is long, but the clutch is easy and forgiving, and the whole thing rewards a confident, flowing pace.

History: an icon with a story

Around 1,000 examples of the 330 GT 2+2 were built in total, of which roughly 625 were Series 1 cars with the quad headlights, produced between 1963 and 1965 before the twin-headlight Series 2 took over. Add in the Pininfarina design, the Colombo V12 and Enzo's personal endorsement, and this is a car with genuine pedigree, not just a pretty shape.

This example: from Collection by Vermant

This particular Series 1 comes out of the private collection at Collection by Vermant in Mechelen, and it has been cherished. First registered in September 1964, it shows just 13,511 km, has been mechanically restored, and wears its original colour, resprayed but true to how it left the factory. Tellingly, the interior has never been redone, which is exactly why it still feels so authentic. It is offered at €268,450, a serious sum, but this is a serious piece of Ferrari history.

AutoNext Verdict

The 330 GT 2+2 has long lived in the shadow of flashier Ferraris, and that has always been unfair. This is a car designed to be used, to cross countries in comfort with a Colombo V12 singing ahead of you, and it does that better than almost anything of its era. Beautiful, comfortable and genuinely usable, it is grand touring in its purest 1960s form.

It is not a sports car, and it does not pretend to be. There is no power steering, the gearbox asks for a deliberate hand, and the leaf-sprung rear belongs to another age. But none of that matters once you understand what this car is for. Enzo knew. He drove one himself.

This particular example, low mileage, mechanically restored and wearing its honest original interior, is about as good as they come. If you want a usable, blue-chip classic Ferrari with real provenance, this is one to chase.

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