You own a non-road-legal race car – a GT3 Cup, Ferrari Challenge car, prototype or track-only hypercar – and you regularly attend track days in France, the United Kingdom, Italy or Germany.
Your vehicle is worth several hundred thousand euros, sometimes more. It moves across borders in a dedicated truck and runs on some of Europe’s most iconic circuits.
But if an accident happens at Spa, Silverstone, Monza or Le Castellet, who actually pays?
Many owners discover too late that their existing policies do not cover on-track damage, circuit infrastructure costs or international transport. Yet a single off-track excursion can easily result in losses exceeding €100,000.
Let us look at the key elements required to properly protect this type of high-value, mobile and atypical asset.
A non-road-legal race car:
In France, the United Kingdom and Italy alike, mandatory motor insurance applies to vehicles intended for use on public roads. A car used exclusively on closed circuits does not fall within that framework.
As a result, a standard motor policy – even a comprehensive “all risks” one – will almost always exclude any use on track.
This misconception is more common than one might expect, even among experienced owners.
A track day is not a formally sanctioned competition listed by a national federation (such as the FFSA in France, Motorsport UK or ACI Sport in Italy).
It is generally:
Participants usually sign a waiver. However, such waivers do not eliminate all liability, particularly in cases of:
National courts may interpret these situations differently.
In the United Kingdom, the concept of negligence can be strictly assessed.
In Italy, proceedings may be more formal and time-consuming.
In France, civil liability principles may apply depending on the circumstances.

An off-track incident can result in:
On a GT3 Cup, repair bills between €70,000 and €120,000 are far from exceptional.
Circuits in France, the United Kingdom, Italy and Germany routinely charge for:
A single incident can generate €10,000 to €25,000 in additional costs.
A collision may:
Personal injury awards can reach several million euros, particularly in the United Kingdom.
Transport by truck is typically governed by the CMR Convention (Convention on the Contract for the International Carriage of Goods by Road).
CMR liability limits are calculated per kilogram transported, not on the actual value of the car. For a race car, this limit is significantly below its market value.
Without an additional “ad valorem” insurance policy, compensation may be grossly insufficient.

This policy covers:
Key considerations include:
Under-declaring the vehicle’s value to reduce the premium can prove extremely costly in the event of a total loss.
The organiser’s liability policy is rarely sufficient.
A dedicated liability cover should address:
Limits must be aligned with cross-border exposure, especially where events take place in multiple jurisdictions.
Essential to cover:
It should be coordinated with the on-track policy to avoid coverage gaps.
Each country has:
A policy valid in France may not provide identical protection in the United Kingdom or Italy if it has not been structured with international exposure in mind.

A non-road-legal race car is a high-value mobile asset.
It moves across jurisdictions, logistics providers and event organisers.
The challenge is not simply to “obtain a policy”, but to:
At IFO Global, we approach such matters in the same way we do for yachts navigating multiple jurisdictions or art collections exhibited internationally.
The objective is not a standard policy, but a coherent protection architecture tailored to a demanding and internationally mobile owner.
Attending track days abroad is an extraordinary passion.
But the financial exposure is significant.
A single incident may:
Before your next season begins, it is essential to review carefully:
Protecting a non-road-legal race car is not a minor administrative detail. It is a strategic asset protection decision.
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