2026 Maserati MCPura supercars will be cheaper than the models they replace


The two-seat, rear-wheel drive, scissor-doored 2026 Maserati MCPura sports car has been priced from $450,000 before on-road costs ahead of its arrival in Australia early next year – less than the MC20 it replaces.

Maserati Australia has announced the $450k starting price for the upgraded MCPura Coupe, while the MCPura Cielo (convertible) will cost $520,000 before on-roads. 

This compares to $490,000 for the previous MC20 Coupe and $555,000 for the previous MC20 Convertible when they were last updated in 2023, with Maserati Australia saying it has benefitted from a better exchange rate for the MCPura. 

That makes the Italian trident brand’s top-shelf sports car more affordable than the McLaren Artura, which is priced at $495,004 before on-roads, the Porsche 911 Turbo S ($577,300 before on-roads), and the hybrid V6-powered Ferrari 296 GTB ($604,000 before on-roads). 

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A revised version of the MC20, the MCPura – a name which represents a ‘pure’ expression of its supercar, says Maserati – comes with upwards-opening ‘butterfly’ doors, in both both coupe and convertible forms. 

The tweaked exterior design is also offered in an array of custom paint finishes, including matt, gloss, three-layer, and four-layer, but has unpainted areas showing off its lightweight carbon-fibre construction.

The MCPura’s mid-mounted 3.0-litre twin-turbo ‘Nettuno’ (meaning Neptune in Italian) 90-degree petrol V6 makes 463kW of power and 720Nm of torque – identical outputs to the MC20 – and propels it to the same claimed 2.9-second 0-100km/h time.

The Italian automaker quotes a top speed of ‘greater than 320km’ for its new performance heroes, which run 20-inch forged alloy wheels and have an active exhaust as a backing track to its serious speed.