2023 Ferrari SF90 Stradale (phev) Reviews
You'll find all our 2023 Ferrari SF90 Stradale (phev) reviews right here. 2023 Ferrari SF90 Stradale (phev) prices range from for the SF90 Stradale (phev) to for the SF90 Stradale (phev) .
Our reviews offer detailed analysis of the 's features, design, practicality, fuel consumption, engine and transmission, safety, ownership and what it's like to drive.
The most recent reviews sit up the top of the page, but if you're looking for an older model year or shopping for a used car, scroll down to find Ferrari dating back as far as 2020.
Or, if you just want to read the latest news about the Ferrari SF90 Stradale (phev), you'll find it all here.
Ferrari Reviews and News

Michael Schumacher: 14 things you didn't know about the seven-time F1 drivers champion
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By Stephen Ottley · 13 Sep 2021
Michael Schumacher is one of the most successful, and controversial, drivers in the history of Formula One.
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Niki Lauda: 17 things you didn't know about the F1 champion
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By James Cleary · 11 Aug 2021
Although the 2013 feature film Rush brought the name of three-time Formula One world champion Niki Lauda to the attention of a wider, younger audience, he’s been one of the most recognisable figures in the world of motorsport since his Formula One debut in the early 1970s.

Why Daniel Ricciardo could become an F1 winner again: 2021 Formula 1 season preview
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By Stephen Ottley · 27 Mar 2021
Daniel Ricciardo carries the hopes of a nation with him as the Formula 1 season begins this weekend in Bahrain – we all want to see him drinking champagne from his race boots on the podium again.

What does a Countach, two F40s, an Enzo, XJ220 and dozens of other wishlist cars and bikes have in common? They'll all be in the same place in Sydney this Sunday
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By Tung Nguyen · 25 Mar 2021
Over 100 supercars, classic cars and motorcycles will be out on display this weekend as part of the Vaucluse Car Club's Autumn Gathering to help raise money for the Sydney's Children's Hospital Foundation.Set to be held at The Gap Bluff at Watsons Bay on
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Top 11 celebrity car collections
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By Iain Kelly · 15 Sep 2020
A key part of “celebrity life” is having a garage heaving with expensive, exotic cars to maintain that image of wealth and success. Sports stars, musicians, actors, fashion designers and others in the glitterarti have plenty of pesos in the bank to fund a lavish lifestyle, and a few of them have spent their hard-earned building seriously cool collections of cars.
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Best good-looking car buys by segment
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By Craig Duff · 05 Jul 2020
We spend weeks comparing new car performance and prices... then fall for a shiny one.
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Hottest convertibles for this summer
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By Craig Duff · 05 Jul 2020
Convertibles have a short shelf-life, pick your summer outfit from these drop-tops.

Ferrari Testarossa price: How much does a Testarossa cost?
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By Iain Kelly · 01 Jul 2020
Ferrari’s top-dog 12-cylinder models have always commanded an exclusive, exotic place in the pantheon of cars, and they are surely the pride of Italy. In 1984 the new F110 model “Testarossa” debuted, featuring a mid-mounted 390hp (287kW) Tipo 113B flat-12 engine to keep weight low in the wide-set chassis.

Kit cars Australia: Can you still build one in 2020?
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By Iain Kelly · 20 May 2020
What is a kit car?A kit car is a type of vehicle either built at home or in a small workshop using components sourced from other vehicles, and are often designed to look like a fancier, more expensive vehicle.At one point in Australia’s motoring history the kit car industry was a booming business. Beginning in post-war years, handy people who weren’t prepared to get grimy scrounging wrecking yards to build a hot rod could order a set of plans, or parts in kit form, to build a vehicle at home.The Lotus 7 was thought to be among the first cars sold in kit form, as a way of cheapening the cost of buying the vehicle and avoiding delays in having Lotus assemble a running, driving car. The popularity of the 7 led to a whole class of clubman vehicles that are all about home-built super-lightweight fun.Kit cars in Australia back in the day would see punters order the bare bones parts of the vehicle, sometimes including the chassis and body, which would be supplied unfinished. These DIY handymen would then find the drivetrain from popular makes and models.For those not so talented on the tools, a kit car can be more of a custom vehicle based off a cheap, commonly available donor like the Toyota Celica or Volkswagen Beetle, with a modified body fitted on top. These were often offered as a drive-in, drive-out customisation for client’s existing vehicles by companies like Adelaide’s Creative Cars.Creative Cars sold kits to turn a Beetle into a Porsche 911 lookalike called the Poraga and Porerra, or a Celica dressed as a Ferrari 308 called the Cerino, among others. The latter was initially known as the Ferrino, until Ferrari objected to the name. These weren’t cheap, with the Poraga conversion costing $10,000 back in the mid-1980s!However, the kit car industry was impacted as road rules were created to control the types of cars allowed on Australian roads. While it was OK in the 1950s for anyone to put whatever engine into another type of chassis and fit their own, home-made body on top, by the early 1980s we had federal laws setting a minimum standard for cars being brought into Australia to be sold as road cars (Australian Design Rules), and then we had ever-tightening state-based laws controlling what modifications were permitted for road-going vehicles.By the late 1980s kit cars were mostly sold as replicas of rare 1960s exotic cars like the Ford GT40, Shelby Cobra and Ferrari 250 GTO. Sometimes these cars could be ordered as a turn-key car, or a DIY kit to be built at home to the owner’s exact specifications. However as road regulations tightened through the 1990s, the cost of gaining registration approval for road use skyrocketed to over $300,000 per-car (depending on the state the vehicle needed to be registered in).These costs came as the vehicle had to be built to the same standards as a modern car, which is incredibly difficult in a vehicle built at home to replicate a 1960s car, and then approved by a registered engineering signatory who had a process of inspecting and testing the vehicle. As laws are fluid and constantly changing, many kit cars end up unfinished as owners find it difficult to navigate a highly complex and expensive process. This is why kit cars are all but extinct now in Australia.The good news is there are many ways to build a kit car today, if you have plenty of dollars in the bank and can set aside several years to step through the whole process. For this reason, many people choose to customise their car in a more traditional hot rod-style, rather than building a complete vehicle from the ground-up.Today you can buy car body kits online for a variety of budgets. Among the most popular are the Japanese “Rocket Bunny Pandem” kits from TRA Kyoto’s Kei Miura. Featuring fat, 80s-style rivet-on boxed wide-body guards, deep front bumper extensions, and his trademark duck-tail spoiler, they end a massively aggressive race flair to otherwise common sports cars.Talk to any late-model tuner car enthusiast and they’ll tell you the hottest cars in their scene are Toyota 86 Rocket Bunny, S14 Rocket Bunny Silvia, S15 Rocket Bunny Silvia, an RX-7 Rocket Bunny, or a 350Z Rocket Bunny. They rarely look anything like the original car and could almost be considered a kit car, especially with the popularity of power-adders like the many Toyota 86 turbo kits on offer.For those who are feeling really adventurous there is the Vaydor, which is a drastic restyling of a core Nissan/Infiniti G35 Skyline. There is no firm confirmation if the Vaydor G35 is a road legal kit cars in Australia, so don’t spend your pennies there without doing a lot of research first.The booming market is in electric car kit swaps, where a petrol or diesel drivetrain is replaced with an electric one. Again, legalities concerning these modifications aren’t super-well-understood yet but this is a potential area to keep an eye on if you want a silent-running car but can’t afford a Tesla, or don’t want to give up your favourite ride.

Top sports cars sold in 2019
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By Justin Hilliard · 29 Jan 2020
Let’s face it, when the sports-car bubble bursts, it bursts hard – real hard. You only need to look back to 2019 to get the latest example of that fact, with Australian sales down a massive 20.8 per cent