Skip advert
Advertisement

New Ferrari 488 Spider 2016 review

How do you make the Ferrari 488 GTB supercar even more exciting? The roofless Ferrari 488 Spider has the answer

Overall Auto Express rating

5.0

How we review cars
Find your Ferrari 488
Compare deals from trusted partners on this car and previous models.
Or are you looking to sell your car?
Value my car
Fast, no-nonsense car selling
Value my car

We already knew the 488 was good, but the stunning Ferrari 488 Spider adds another layer of involvement to the driving experience. With the folding hard-top stowed, it gets you closer to the sound and speed of the car’s explosive V8. Yet it’s just as usable every day as the coupe. At £204,400, the Spider isn’t cheap, but for ultimate high-performance, wind-in-the-hair thrills, the Ferrari is the ultimate open-top supercar.

Advertisement - Article continues below

The launch of a new mid-engined, two-seat Ferrari convertible is always a special event – it’s all about excitement, glamour and noise. We last drove the Ferrari 488 Spider nine months ago in the Ferrari’s natural habitat of the rolling hills surrounding Modena, Italy. But now is our chance to get behind the wheel of a right-hand drive version in the UK.

The 488 GTB Coupe is one of the performance cars of the moment, so lopping the roof off is a sure-fire way of guarantying extra sales. That’s the philistine’s view; to everyone else the Spider represents something extra special. 

Best supercars to buy now

The 488 Spider carries over the retractable hard top first seen on its predecessor, the 458 Spider. It’s a clever arrangement – a pull on the button mounted on the centre console sees the metal roof above the driver’s head fold backwards. At the same time a small cover in front of the engine bay rises up and the roof peels back into the gap. It’s clever and quite spectacular to witness; it takes just 14 seconds and unlike on the 458, it can be done at speeds of up to 30mph.

Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Used - available now

A-Class Saloon

2022 Mercedes

A-Class Saloon

22,719 milesAutomaticDiesel2.0L

Cash £22,100
View A-Class Saloon
Discovery Sport

2023 Land Rover

Discovery Sport

55,696 milesAutomaticPetrol1.5L

Cash £22,200
View Discovery Sport
C4

2024 Citroen

C4

32,648 milesAutomaticPetrol1.2L

Cash £13,995
View C4
C3 Aircross

2023 Citroen

C3 Aircross

3,076 milesManualPetrol1.2L

Cash £12,995
View C3 Aircross

When the roof is down, a three-stage glass wind deflector allows you to travel along at motorway speeds holding a conversation with your passenger with ease. But if the weather takes a turn, putting the roof up doesn’t mean the V8 howl is lost - you can lower the glass wind deflector between the flying buttresses, allowing the engine’s fabulous noise to travel uninhibited into the cabin.

Advertisement - Article continues below

Moreover, with the roof up, the Spider manages to look prettier than the GTB. Put the roof and windows down and the Spider is one of the most elegant modern Ferraris since the 355 in our eyes.

The Spider is certainly one of quickest ever drop-top Ferraris, too. The GTB’s 3.9-litre twin-turbo flat crank V8 has been carried over completely unchanged meaning there’s 660bhp and 760Nm of torque at your disposal. In fact, it’s all about the torque with this engine because it peaks at just 3,000rpm. The result is so violent Ferrari’s engineers have limited the amount of torque available in the lower gears to try and smooth out the delivery and avoid what every keen driver hates in a turbocharged engine – lag.

And, my word, Ferrari has done a good job. There’s absolutely no hesitation from the engine whatsoever as it responds immediately to what you right foot is doing with the throttle pedal. The dash from 0-62mph takes three seconds and while that’s just as fast as a McLaren 650S Spider, the 488 Spider feels quicker. Apart from the odd ‘whoosh’ you would have no idea the engine is turbocharged, and while it does fall a little short of the old 458 Spider’s whaling 4.5-litre naturally aspirated V8 for aural pleasure, the 488’s V8 is still a masterpiece.

Advertisement - Article continues below
Skip advert
Advertisement
Skip advert
Advertisement - Article continues below

Despite having its roof taken off, Ferrari claims the drop-top has the same structural rigidity as the coupe, which is quite an achievement. But Ferrari had to work hard in this department as the 488 Spider’s rival from Woking, the McLaren 650S Spider, can have its roof lopped off with no detriment to rigidity thanks to its carbon tub. While there is the merest hint of wobble when you’re cornering hard or if you hit a bump mid-corner, the 488 Spider is impressively rigid.

With this strength, the Ferrari shows that it’s no open top poser’s car. Indeed, it comes with all the clever technology the GTB has such as the active aerodynamics to boost stability. The Spider also gets Ferrari’s armoury of driver assistance tools, including adaptive dampers and Ferrari’s clever side slip angle control system. It loosens the reins of the traction control system allowing you to elegantly slide the rear end before the system intervenes and gathers it all up for you.

Add in light and accurate steering, razor-sharp seven-speed dual-clutch gearbox and slightly recalibrated suspension – in its ‘Bumpy Road’ setting’ the Spider rides better than most German executive saloons – and it’s a intoxicating package.

The interior is comfortable too – the driver-focused arrangement works well with two pods acting as your entertainment and car information hubs, visibility is generally good. With all of this, you start to wonder why you’d want the GTB.

Well, there is the question of a £20,000 price hike but at this price point, it’s a small leap for something that adds so much extra drama and excitement to an already thrilling and outstanding package. 

Skip advert
Advertisement

New & used car deals

Vauxhall Corsa

Vauxhall Corsa

RRP £19,690Avg. savings £5,488 off RRP*Used from £5,292
Nissan Juke

Nissan Juke

RRP £19,785Avg. savings £6,556 off RRP*Used from £9,675
Nissan Qashqai

Nissan Qashqai

RRP £27,415Avg. savings £7,957 off RRP*Used from £11,276
Hyundai Tucson

Hyundai Tucson

RRP £29,585Avg. savings £6,027 off RRP*Used from £13,995
* Average savings are calculated daily based on the best dealer prices on Auto Express vs manufacturer RRP
Skip advert
Advertisement

Most Popular

Long-term test: BYD Sealion 7
BYD Sealion 7 - front tracking

Long-term test: BYD Sealion 7

Second report: all is not rosy in the garden when it comes to driving our BYD
Long-term tests
13 Mar 2026
Peugeot is building a brand new petrol engine – who says ICE is dead?
New Peugeot ‘Turbo 100’ engine

Peugeot is building a brand new petrol engine – who says ICE is dead?

New 1.2-litre three-cylinder petrol engine to replace Puretech motors in Peugeot and more
News
16 Mar 2026
Kia PV5 Passenger vs Vauxhall Vivaro Life: can South Korea’s MPV beat a home-grown rival?
Kia PV5 Passenger vs Vauxhall Vivaro Life - front angled

Kia PV5 Passenger vs Vauxhall Vivaro Life: can South Korea’s MPV beat a home-grown rival?

Kia is entering new territory with its quirky van-based PV5 electric MPV. Vauxhall’s Vivaro Life is a benchmark rival, so can the South Korean newcome…
Car group tests
14 Mar 2026