Login
My Garage
New hero

With Cristiano Ronaldo pushing for a January Man Utd exit, we take a look at his £18m fleet of cars

By Tom Gibson | September 13, 2022

Share

Why not leave a comment?

See all | Add a comment

Arguably the world’s greatest-ever footballer has got a car collection to rival the very best

With Cristiano Ronaldo pushing for a January Man Utd exit, we take a look at his £18m fleet of cars

Manchester United’s £500k per week forward has got over 20 luxury cars in various garages around the world.

But as he eyes up a January transfer away from the club, transporting some of his favourites to other countries would undoubtedly give him – or his agent – a little logistical challenge.

Forbes estimated Ronaldo has earned around £860m during the course of his truly unbelievable career that has seen him shatter all sorts of goal scoring records. And it’s fair to say he’s spent at least £20m of that on some hugely impressive cars.

His current collection is estimated to be worth around £18m alone and includes limited edition Bugattis, Ferraris, Rolls-Royces, Aston Martins, McLarens – and more.

Earlier this year, the Portuguese forward spent around £8.5m on special Bugatti Centodieci, of which there are only 10 in existence. The Centodieci has a whopping 8 litre W16 engine that pushes out 1600hp, meaning it can do 0-62mph in just 2.4 seconds and reach a top speed of 236mph.

Safe to say he hasn’t felt the pinch of the fuel crisis.

The Centodieci is one of three Bugatti’s in his collection, with the other two both having 'CR7' embroidered on the headrests - a Chiron and Veyron.

Ronaldo has often been pictured choosing comfort when driving to and from the training ground and in the last few weeks alone has been seen driving a Bentley, a Range Rover and Lamborghini Urus to Man United’s Carrington training complex.

Some of his other most impressive cars include a £1m McLaren Senna, a gigantic Mercedes G-Wagon Brabus and a Rolls-Royce Phantom.

Ronaldo's £17.9m fleet

Bugatti Centodieci – £8.5m

Bugatti Chiron – £2.5m

Bugatti Veyron – £1.7m

McLaren Senna – £1m

Mercedes G-Wagon Brabus – £600,000

Rolls-Royce Phantom – £363,000

Ferrari F12 TDF – £350,0000 (15,013,000)

Ferrari 599 GTO – £331,000

Rolls-Royce Cullinan – £330,000

Maserati GranCabrio – £288,000

Bentley Flying Spur – £269,000

Ferrari 599 GTB Fiorano – £267,000

Lamborghini Aventador – £260,000

Ferrari F430 – £258,000

Aston Martin DBS Superlegger – £200,000

Aston Martin DB9 – £172,000

Related Articles

How much does it really cost to charge an EV at home and on the road?
A clear breakdown of home charging versus public charging, showing what each costs per mile.
Aug 29, 2025
EV battery life explained: why you are unlikely to ever need a replacement
How long EV batteries last, how they degrade over time and why most drivers will never face a costly replacement.
Aug 29, 2025
What is the best electric car for families in 2025?
The most practical electric cars for families, with space, range and value in mind including Omoda’s new E5 SUV.
Aug 29, 2025
Omoda’s electric future: what models are on the way?
A look ahead at Omoda’s electric plans and the models set to arrive in the UK.
Aug 29, 2025