This £110k 12C Is Your Cheapest Route To McLaren Ownership

Fresh from a drive in the new McLaren 720S, we're taking a look at a used example of its predecessor
This £110k 12C Is Your Cheapest Route To McLaren Ownership

A week and a half ago, our man Alex found himself in Italy hooning around in the new McLaren 720S. It’s a technological showcase that also happens to be bonkers fast, and it shows how far McLaren Automotive has come in a very short space of time.

That’s not to stay the car that started it all is a dinosaur. The 12C - introduced in 2011 - marked the beginning of the Woking-based supercar builder as we know it today, was the first road car to wear a McLaren badge since the legendary F1. At the time, it was just about the geekiest supercar in its segment.

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We’re not just talking about its hilariously clunky original title of ‘MP4-12C’ (shortened to just ‘12C’ in 2012’). Nope: we’re talking about the carbonfibre tub, the 3.8-litre twin-turbo V8 pinched from a deceased racing car project (which can be traced back to Nissan, weirdly), and the car’s enormously clever ‘ProActive Chassis Control’.

This system has all four dampers linked to one gas-filled ‘accumulator’, effectively negating the need for an anti-roll bar. Sensors monitor body movements, stiffening the dampers when required, and ‘decoupling’ them during more gentle driving. The result is a ride that’s weirdly smooth for a shouty V8 supercar.

This £110k 12C Is Your Cheapest Route To McLaren Ownership

The 12C evolved into the 650S in 2014, with the ‘original’ car hanging on for a few more months before being discontinued. The P1-inspired styling on the 650S immediately made the 12C look dated, but a few years on, there’s something pleasingly understated about the car.

This £110k 12C Is Your Cheapest Route To McLaren Ownership

Six years on, the earliest used 12Cs are still going for well over £100,000. This Ice Silver example is the cheapest we’ve seen for sale in the UK, but you’ll still need to stump up £109,950. Still, that is cheaper than a Ferrari 458, for which you’ll need at least £140,000.

So, put yourself in the shoes of a rich-ish used supercar buyer for a moment: do you get the McLaren, or spend a little more and go for the Ferrari? To the comments section!

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