The F12 Berlinetta's 6.3L naturally-aspirated V12 is an engineering marvel but demands religious maintenance and can suffer catastrophic bearing and piston failures if oil service intervals slip or track abuse occurs. The dual-clutch transmission is robust but heat-sensitive, and hydraulic components age poorly in these low-mileage exotics.
Engine Bearing and Piston Failure (Oil Starvation / Track Use)
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 15,000-40,000 mi
Symptoms: Knocking or rattling from bottom end at idle or under load, Metal shavings in oil filter or on magnetic drain plug, Sudden loss of oil pressure, Seized engine after track day or extended high-RPM use
Fix: Complete engine-out teardown required. Short block replacement if bearings have spun; full rebuild if piston ring land cracking or scoring present. Budget 60-80 hours labor for removal, teardown, machining, reassembly, reinstallation. Parts include bearings, pistons, rings, gaskets, timing components. Often traced to extended oil change intervals (Ferrari spec is 12mo/10k mi but track cars need 5k mi changes) or oil starvation during high-G cornering.
Estimated cost: $35,000-65,000
Dual-Clutch Transmission Oil Cooler Failure
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 20,000-50,000 mi
Symptoms: Transmission overheat warning on dash, Harsh or delayed shifts when gearbox is hot, Visible transmission fluid leaks near front undertray, Burning smell after spirited driving
Fix: Oil cooler seals fail or cooler core develops pinhole leaks. Requires removal of front undertray and cooler replacement. Also replace transmission fluid and filter during service. Takes 6-8 hours with proper lift access. Use only OEM cooler—aftermarket units fail quickly.
Estimated cost: $3,500-5,500
Transmission Mount Deterioration
Common · medium severityTypical onset: 30,000-60,000 mi
Symptoms: Clunking when shifting from reverse to drive or under hard acceleration, Vibration through chassis at idle in gear, Visible cracking or separation of rubber mount bushings during inspection
Fix: Hydraulic transmission mounts crack and leak fluid, causing excessive drivetrain movement. Replacement requires gearbox support and partial exhaust removal. 4-6 hours labor. Always replace both mounts simultaneously—if one has failed, the other is close behind.
Estimated cost: $2,800-4,200
Brake Master Cylinder and Brake Booster Hydraulic Leaks
Occasional · high severityTypical onset: 40,000-70,000 mi
Symptoms: Soft or spongy brake pedal feel, Brake fluid level drops repeatedly, Hissing sound from brake booster area, Brake warning light illuminated
Fix: Carbon-ceramic brake cars especially prone to master cylinder seal failure and vacuum booster diaphragm leaks. Diagnosis requires pressure testing of hydraulic system. Replacement of master cylinder and booster assembly takes 8-10 hours due to firewall access constraints. Must bleed entire system with dedicated Ferrari diagnostic tool for ABS module activation. This issue is part of the NHTSA recall for hydraulic brakes—verify recall completion before purchase.
Estimated cost: $4,500-7,000
Fuel Filter Clogging and Fuel Pump Failures
Occasional · medium severityTypical onset: 35,000-60,000 mi
Symptoms: Rough idle or misfires under load, Loss of power at high RPM, Difficulty starting when fuel tank below 1/4, Check engine light with lean fuel codes (P0171, P0174)
Fix: In-tank fuel filter clogs from ethanol fuel breakdown—Ferrari specifies non-ethanol fuel but most US owners run E10. Filter replacement requires tank drop (12-14 hours labor). Fuel pumps also fail from running low on fuel frequently. Many techs replace both filter and pumps simultaneously to avoid repeat tank drops. Use only OEM pumps—pressure specs are critical on high-strung DI engines.
Estimated cost: $3,200-5,800
Takata Airbag Inflator Recall (Passenger Side)
Common · high severitySymptoms: NHTSA recall notice received by owner, No symptoms until inflator deploys—then risk of metal fragment projection
Fix: Passenger frontal airbag inflator replacement required per NHTSA recall. Takes 2-3 hours at authorized Ferrari dealer. This is a safety-critical recall—verify completion via VIN check before purchasing any used F12. Parts availability has been intermittent; some owners waited 6+ months for inflator modules.
Estimated cost: $0 (recall repair, no cost to owner)
Head Gasket Seepage (Both Banks)
Rare · medium severityTypical onset: 50,000-80,000 mi
Symptoms: White residue or coolant trails along cylinder head mating surfaces, Slight coolant loss over time with no visible external leaks, Sweet coolant smell from engine bay after hot soak
Fix: Not common, but when head gaskets begin weeping on the F12's V12, it's a 40-50 hour job due to tight engine bay packaging. Requires cylinder head removal from both banks, resurfacing, new gaskets, timing chain inspection, and camshaft resealing. Often discovered during valve adjustment service. Catch it early before coolant enters cylinders.
Estimated cost: $18,000-28,000
Buy only with comprehensive pre-purchase inspection from a Ferrari specialist and a six-month emergency fund—when these break, they break expensively, but a well-maintained example with documented oil changes is one of the last naturally-aspirated V12 supercars and worth the risk for the right enthusiast.
AI-assisted summary drawn from NHTSA recall data, our labor-times database, and platform knowledge. Not a substitute for a pre-purchase inspection on a specific vehicle.