A Record-Setting Saturday as Broad Arrow Closes $107M+ $Amelia Concours Auction with $6,605,000 Lamborghini Miura SV
Broad Arrow sees enthusiastic bidding from start to finish during second and final day of 2026 Amelia Concours Auction | Saturday led by 1972 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV at $6,605,000, a landslide new world for a Miura at auction | Two-day sale total currently sits in excess of $107 million, Broad Arrow’s most successful auction to date | Strong prices and additional records achieved across all segments of the market, most notably for Ferraris and for Americana offered from respected private collections | Complete results will be available at broadarrowauctions.com in coming days
Amelia Island, Florida, March 07, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- Broad Arrow Auctions, driven by Hagerty (NYSE: HGTY), saw another outstanding sale today at The Ritz-Carlton, Amelia Island, the final day of its March 6-7 Amelia Concours Auction. With sustained energy in the room and spirited bidding from the first to the very last lot of the day, the Saturday sale capped off what is Broad Arrow’s most successful auction since the company was founded in 2021.
Currently sitting at an overall total of $107 million+ before post-sale activities and official results, Broad Arrow’s Saturday lineup at the Amelia Concours Auction was led by an incredibly original, time-capsule 1972 Lamborghini Miura P400 SV, which spent more than half a century in the loving care of a single American private collector. Estimated to bring $3,500,000 - $4,000,000, bidding on the Miura was enthusiastic, with a long back-and-forth between bidders in the room and on the phone. Following intentional increment jumps by multiple bidders, the well-preserved original supercar sold for a final $6,605,000 to a bidder over the phone, surpassing the previous record for any Miura at auction by more than $1,700,000.
Passionate collectors continued their enthusiastic bidding throughout the Saturday auction, with additional world record prices achieved for a 2001 RUF RGT at a final $335,000 and a 2015 Ferrari 458 Speciale at a final $912,500. Stand-out prices emerged in nearly every category of car collecting, most notably for modern collectibles of the 1990s and 2000s, alongside exceptional pre- and post-War American and European cars offered from the respected private collections of Wellington Morton and Bill & Patti Spurling.

