A 2015 Maserati Quattroporte S is drawing healthy attention at an online auction in the United Kingdom, where 15 bids have carried the price to £14,750 with five days remaining before the sale ends at 1:30 p.m. on June 9, 2026. The saloon carries an estimated value of £22,000 to £27,000 and is offered with no buyer's fees from The Market HQ.

Finished in Grigio Maratea over a sand and black leather interior described as an excellent trim specification, the right-hand-drive car shows 22,807 miles and is reported to be in great order throughout. The listing also notes an interesting first owner. Power comes from a 2,979cc petrol engine paired with an automatic transmission.
The Quattroporte name carries more history than its translation suggests. When Maserati moved to broaden its range more than half a century ago, conventional wisdom held that real Italian sports cars had two doors, so the company needed an evocative badge to justify a larger price. It settled on Quattroporte — a word that sounds exotic abroad but simply means four-door in Italian. The listing argues that the simplicity of the name reveals the car's confidence: Maserati needed to advertise nothing more than the door count, and the rest spoke for itself.
The sixth-generation model, introduced in 2013 and known internally as the M156, was the fastest Quattroporte the company had built, developed to counter rivals from Aston Martin, Porsche and Bentley. Buyers could choose a Ferrari-built twin-turbo V6 producing between 325 and 424 horsepower, a twin-turbo V8 shared with Ferrari making 523 to 572 horsepower, or a tax-efficient diesel. Top speeds began at 168 mph and exceeded 200 mph in the most powerful version.
Maserati built 4,264 examples over a nine-year run before production ended in 2021. The listing characterizes the car as equally suited to a routine supermarket trip or a memorable blast along an Alpine pass.
Source: The Market