Autoblog and Yahoo may earn commission from links in this article.My expert opinion and pricing analysis on the auctionThe F430 was originally available with a factory 6-speed manual, but the overwhelming majority left Maranello with the F1 paddle-shift transmission. Ferrari claimed it was faster. Purists claimed it was soulless. The debate has never really ended, but the market has rendered its verdict pretty clearly.Manual-converted F430 Spiders occupy an interesting and nuanced corner of the collector market. According to Classic.com data for Ferrari F430 manual conversions, the highest recorded sale for a manual conversion in this family was $305,000, achieved by a 2008 Ferrari 430 Scuderia 6-speed conversion in May 2025, while the lowest recorded sale in the same category was $96,480 for a 2007 F430 manual conversion in February 2025. For context on the broader Spider market, the average sale price of a Ferrari F430 Spider with a manual transmission is $281,371, with the highest recorded sale reaching $485,000 for a 2006 example in May 2026. That top figure is genuinely staggering and reflects how hot demand has become for open-top analog Ferraris.AdvertisementAdvertisementAt 15,000 miles, this is a genuinely low-mileage example, which matters. The F430 is mechanically robust when maintained, and a car that hasn't been abused is a very different proposition from one that's been tracked or neglected. That said, for a well-sorted example in good shape, landing somewhere in the $150,000 to $220,000 range wouldn't be surprising, with the conversion adding a meaningful premium over a standard F1-car at this mileage. Collectibility is strong and trending upward.The auctionMake: FerrariModel: F430 SpiderYear: 2006Mileage: Approximately 15,000 milesEngine: 4.3-liter naturally aspirated V8Power: 483 hp at 8,500 rpmTransmission: 6-speed manual conversion (gated)Drive type: Rear-wheel driveExterior color: Verify on listing pageInterior color: Verify on listing pageCurrent bid: Live at auction, check listing for current figureAuction end date: June 4, 2025Interested in this 2006 Ferrari F430 Spider? View the listing here.2006 Ferrari F430 Spider listing detailsThe exterior of the F430 Spider is one of those designs that has aged with remarkable grace. Designed by Frank Stephenson at Pininfarina, the F430 features subtle allusions to the Ferrari flagship of its era, the Enzo, most notably in the tail lights and engine bonnet vents, which were added to give the car a visual kinship with its bigger brother. The raised rear wheel arches with dramatic side air intakes behind the doors remain one of the more distinctive styling cues of the mid-2000s Ferrari era. The retractable canvas roof folds away neatly into the space above the engine bay, keeping the rear deck clean.Under the hood, the F430 is powered by a 4.3-liter V8 producing 483 hp at 8,500 rpm and 343 lb-ft of torque at 5,200 rpm. The engine grew by a 20 percent increase in displacement over its predecessor while gaining only 8.8 pounds in weight, with connecting rods, pistons, and a crankshaft all sourced new, and four-valve cylinder heads retained directly from the Formula One engine program. The result is an engine that rewards revving with a ferocity that few naturally aspirated units can match.Inside, the F430 Spider cabin wraps the driver in leather-trimmed sport bucket seats, a tachometer-dominated instrument cluster, and a leather-wrapped steering wheel. The gated manual shifter sits where it should, center stage, and the whole package is exactly what a driver-focused open-top Ferrari should be.2006 Ferrari F430 Spider quick takeThe F430 Spider sits in one of the most celebrated eras of Ferrari's modern history: naturally aspirated, analog, and unfiltered. It came after the universally beloved 360 and before the turbocharged age ushered in by the 488. For this specific unit, the 6-speed manual conversion is not a modification in the pejorative sense. Done properly by a reputable shop, it's closer to a correction, restoring the analog soul that the F1 transmission, for all its speed, quietly suppressed. The market clearly agrees: these cars carry a premium that grows with each passing year as the window to own a naturally aspirated, open-top Ferrari with a gearshift and a clutch pedal keeps closing. At 15,000 miles, this one still has plenty of life and driving enjoyment ahead of whoever wins the keys on June 4.AdvertisementAdvertisementDisclaimer: This post is for informational purposes only. We are not a dealership or broker. All vehicle specifications, pricing, and availability are subject to change without notice. We are not responsible for typographical errors, omissions, or the accuracy of the provided information. Please verify all details directly with the seller.This story was originally published by Autoblog on Jun 1, 2026, where it first appeared in the Car Buying section. Add Autoblog as a Preferred Source by clicking here.