Ronda Rousey's Range RoverEbay MotorsFor more than a decade, Ronda Rousey has been one of the most recognizable names in combat sports. She became the UFC’s first female champion, helped drag women’s MMA into the mainstream, won an Olympic bronze medal in judo, and later reinvented herself as a WWE superstar and Hollywood crossover personality. Now, a small piece of that story is up for grabs—in the form of her longtime personal SUV.A 2012 Range Rover Supercharged formerly owned by Rousey has surfaced on eBay, offering fans and collectors the chance to own a vehicle tied directly to the years that transformed her into a global phenomenon.Unlike the celebrity cars that often pass through short-term leases or publicity fleets, this wasn’t a throwaway luxury vehicle. According to the listing, the white-on-black Range Rover served as Rousey’s daily driver from 2012 through 2023—a period that covered nearly every defining chapter of her career. That includes her dominant UFC title reign, her transition into WWE, film appearances, and her emergence as one of the most influential female athletes of her generation.Ronda Rousey's Range RoverEbay MotorsThe SUV itself is no slouch. It’s powered by a supercharged 5.0-liter V8 producing more than 500 horsepower, part of the L322 generation of Range Rover models known for combining off-road capability with old-school luxury. Likewise, the listing notes that original ownership documentation is included, including prior California registration and insurance paperwork bearing Rousey’s name.AdvertisementAdvertisementThat provenance matters. Celebrity-owned vehicles have long occupied a strange corner of the collector market, where the story attached to the car can matter just as much as the machine itself. In this case, the Range Rover represents a snapshot of Rousey during the height of her fame.Rousey recently returned to MMA for the first time in nearly a decade, defeating Gina Carano in just 17 seconds with her trademark armbar submission. The comeback served as a reminder of the aura she once carried as the “Baddest Woman on the Planet,” a persona that helped make her one of the UFC’s first true crossover stars. Before Conor McGregor became a household name, Rousey was headlining pay-per-views and appearing on magazine covers, changing perceptions of women’s combat sports in the process.Now, fans with enough garage space—and enough disposable income—have the chance to own something a little more tangible than a signed glove or replica championship belt.Because memorabilia is one thing. Owning the actual SUV Ronda Rousey drove through the most important years of her career is something else entirely.This article was originally published on Forbes.com