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144 collector scale models from 12 manufacturers across 33 car brands. Norev, GT Spirit, Minichamps, AUTOart, Otto Mobile, IXO — three scales (1:18, 1:43, 1:12), and models in every condition from factory-sealed to carefully pre-owned. New stock lands weekly, but our real edge is discontinued inventory: models that left production and aren't coming back. The filters above will get you to the right shelf fast.
Austin-Healey 3000 Mk1 Roadster Norev 1:18
Bentley Continental GT Coupé Hellmark Metallic Norev 1:18
Aston Martin V8 Vantage Le Mans GT Spirit 1:18
Bentley Continental GT Rouge Bonbon Norev 1:18
Alpine A110 1600S Norev 1:18
Mercedes 500 SL R129 Argent Fumé Norev 1:18
Ferrari 308 GTS Magnum P.I. Norev 1:18
BMW M3 F80 Competition Blauw Norev 1:18
BMW Alpina B10 4.6 E34 Zilver MCG 1:18
BMW Alpina B10 4.6 E34 Blauw MCG 1:18
Renault Megane I Coupé 2.0 16V Otto 1:18
Peugeot 106 Maxi Rally D'Antibes 2000 Otto 1:18
Mercedes CLK GTR Roadster Zwart GT Spirit 1:18
Ford GT Frozen White GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes GLA 45 AMG X156 Dealer Editie GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes 560 SEC W126 Widebody Rood Otto 1:18
Ford Fiesta Mk3 XR2i Otto 1:18
Renault Megane IV RS TC4 Zwart Otto 1:18
BMW 7 Serie E38 750iL Otto 1:18
Jaguar XJ13 GT Spirit 1:18
Audi RS e-tron GT GT Spirit 1:18
Audi RS7 C8 Sportback Grijs Kengfai 1:18
Audi RS7 C8 Sportback Donker Kengfai 1:18
Audi R8 #22 Gumball 3000 GT Spirit 1:18
Audi RS7 C8 Sportback Rood Kengfai 1:18
Ferrari F355 Berlinetta GT Spirit 1:18
Honda Civic FD2 Type R Mugen Wit Otto 1:18
Porsche 911 993 RWB Silver Phantom Azië Editie GT Spirit 1:18
Audi RS7 C8 Sportback Mythos Black Azië Editie GT Spirit 1:18
BMW 7-Serie E32 730i Blauw MCG 1:18
Audi RS6 C7 Avant Met Bodykit Paars GT Spirit 1:18
Lamborghini Diablo Jota GT Spirit 1:18
Audi Coupé GT B2 Otto 1:18
Mercedes SL500 R129 Groen Metallic Norev 1:18
Mercedes A-Klasse W177 AMG Line Norev 1:18
Mercedes 200 W123 Groen Norev 1:18
BMW 7-Serie E32 740i Zilver MCG 1:18
Audi RS7 C8 Sportback ABT Sportsline GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes 200 W115 Taxi Norev 1:18
Ferrari 208 GTB Turbo GT Spirit 1:18
Mazda MX-5 NA Norev 1:18
Mercedes SL500 R230 Zwart Norev 1:18
Mercedes 200 W115 Norev 1:18
BMW M5 F90 CS GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes SL73 AMG R129 Otto 1:18
Honda CRX EF Norev 1:18
BMW Alpina B10 4.6 E34 Groen MCG 1:18
Mercedes 190E 2.3-16 Cosworth W201 Norev 1:18
McLaren Artura GT Spirit 1:18
Ford Mustang S550 RTR Spec 5 10e Verjaardag GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes 300 CE-24 C124 Coupé Zilver Norev 1:18
Audi 80 B2 Quattro Otto 1:18
Mercedes 190 SL W121 Roadster Grijs Norev 1:18
Citroen DS19 Cabriolet Norev 1:18
Citroen AX Super Production Circuit Ledemon 1998 Otto 1:18
Lancia Delta S4 Group B Olympus Rally 1986 Otto 1:18
Mercedes 300 SL W198 Roadster Norev 1:18
BMW M4 G82 Competition M Performance GT Spirit 1:18
Mercedes AMG GT X290 63 4MATIC+ 4-Deurs Coupé Norev 1:18
Audi RS6 C8 GTO Concept GT Spirit 1:18
BMW M2 F87 Competition Lichtgewicht Prestaties GT Spirit 1:18
Ford Sierra Sapphire RS Cosworth 4x4 Otto 1:18
Mercedes 230 E W123 Speciale Editie Norev 1:18
Recently Viewed Models
Collectionner les voitures miniatures — Guide complet
Voitures miniatures diecast et résine de Norev, GT Spirit, Minichamps, AUTOart et bien d'autres
Quelles voitures miniatures proposez-vous ?
Voitures miniatures diecast et résine aux échelles 1:18 (25-30 cm), 1:43 (10 cm), 1:24 et 1:12 (40 cm). Notre collection de voitures miniatures 1:18 est la plus grande — Norev, GT Spirit, Minichamps, AUTOart et bien d'autres. Aussi bien les nouvelles sorties que les pièces de collection dont la production est arrêtée. Depuis 2021.
Puis-je retourner une voiture miniature ?
Garantie satisfaction 14 jours : retournez les articles non utilisés dans leur emballage d'origine pour un remboursement intégral. Article défectueux ? Nous prenons en charge les frais de retour. Endommagé pendant le transport ? Contactez-nous sous 48 heures avec des photos — remplacement gratuit, sans questions.
Comment commencer à collectionner les voitures miniatures ?
Commencez par ce que vous aimez — une marque automobile ou une époque favorites. Débutez avec des voitures miniatures diecast 1:18 pour le meilleur rapport valeur/détail. Fixez un budget mensuel. Meilleures marques pour débuter : Norev et Solido offrent le meilleur rapport qualité-prix en diecast.
Quels fabricants de voitures miniatures sont les plus prestigieux ?
Top premium : CMC (assemblé à la main, qualité muséale), AUTOart (diecast entièrement ouvrant), Minichamps (précision allemande), GT Spirit (éditions limitées résine), BBR (savoir-faire italien). Meilleur rapport qualité-prix : Norev et Solido.
Proposez-vous la pré-commande pour les modèles à venir ?
Oui — réservez les modèles à venir avec un acompte de 20 %. Avantages : allocation garantie (les éditions limitées s'épuisent rapidement), prix bloqué, annulation à tout moment avec remboursement intégral. Nous vous informons à la réception ; payez le solde et nous expédions dans les 24 heures.
Quelles sont les meilleures voitures miniatures diecast pour les collectionneurs ?
Pour les débutants : Norev et Solido (meilleur rapport qualité-prix en diecast). Milieu de gamme : Almost Real et Minichamps (précision des détails). Premium : AUTOart (parties ouvrantes), CMC (qualité muséale). Collectionneurs de résine : GT Spirit et OttO Mobile pour les éditions limitées à moins de 3 000 pièces.
Quelle est la différence entre l'échelle 1:18 et 1:43 ?
Les voitures miniatures 1:18 mesurent 25-28 cm — grandes, détaillées, souvent avec parties ouvrantes. Les modèles 1:43 font 10-12 cm — compacts, abordables, idéaux pour les grandes collections. La plupart des collectionneurs commencent par le 1:18 pour l'impact, puis ajoutent du 1:43 pour la variété et le gain de place.
Expédiez-vous dans le monde entier ?
Oui — nous expédions vers tous les pays de l'UE et dans le monde entier. Emballage protecteur en 5 couches, suivi complet et assurance transport inclus. Livraison UE : 3-7 jours ouvrables. International : 7-14 jours ouvrables. Fondés en 2021 en Pologne, nous servons des collectionneurs dans 27 pays.
What Is a Diecast Model Car?
A diecast model car is a precision replica of a real vehicle, made by injecting molten metal alloy — typically zinc, aluminum, or a blend of both — into steel molds under high pressure. The process produces a solid, heavy body that captures panel lines, proportions, and surface details far more accurately than plastic.
The name refers to the manufacturing method, not the complete model. A finished diecast piece combines metal bodywork with plastic interiors, rubber tires, and photo-etched accessories like grilles, wipers, and mirror housings. Manufacturers vary in how much metal they use: a €35 Norev has a metal body and plastic chassis, while a €300 AUTOart uses metal for both and adds functional suspension.
Collector diecast models are not toys. They are engineered replicas built for adult collectors, with licensed designs, accurate color codes, and production runs measured in hundreds or thousands — not millions. Scales range from 1:43 (palm-sized, ~10 cm) through 1:18 (bookshelf-sized, ~25 cm) to 1:12 (museum-grade, ~38 cm).
Resin is the other major material in scale model collecting. It produces lighter bodies with smoother paint finishes and sharper body lines, but at the cost of durability — resin chips on impact and almost never includes opening parts. Many collectors own both materials.
1:18 Diecast Cars — Size, Detail, and Price Guide
A 1:18 scale model car measures 25-28 cm (10-11 inches) long and weighs 800g-1.2 kg. At this size, a Porsche 911 that spans 4.5 meters in reality becomes a detailed desktop piece — heavy enough that you feel the metal the moment you pick it up.
1:18 is the most popular collector scale worldwide. The size allows manufacturers to engineer details that smaller scales cannot reproduce: individually wired engine bays, textured leather seats, legible instrument gauges, and functional opening doors, hood, and trunk.
Price guide for 1:18 models (diecast and resin):
€30-50 — Norev, Solido: solid opening parts, accurate proportions, good paint. Norev's Mercedes and Porsche licenses are particularly well-regarded at this price.
€50-100 — Minichamps, Almost Real: finer paint, sharper trim details, smaller production runs (500-2,000 pieces).
€80-150 — GT Spirit, Otto Mobile (resin): no opening parts but noticeably sharper paint finish, bold colorways, limited editions of 300-1,500 pieces.
€200-500 — AUTOart Composite: functional suspension, wired engines, photo-etched grilles. The engineering benchmark at 1:18.
For collectors starting out, 1:18 offers the best combination of visual impact, detail, and manufacturer variety. One model on a shelf makes an impression. Ten make a collection.
1:43 and 1:12 Scale Model Cars Compared
1:43 scale models measure roughly 10 cm (4 inches) — palm-sized replicas that pack serious detail into a compact footprint. 1:12 scale measures 35-40 cm — museum-grade showpieces that weigh up to 3 kg. Both serve different needs than the dominant 1:18 format.
1:43 is the traditional European collector standard. Compact size means more models per shelf, lower cost per piece (€20-80), and access to the widest catalog in the hobby. Minichamps alone has produced over 30,000 different 1:43 references since 1990. Spark, IXO, and Schuco round out the field with motorsport liveries, rally cars, and everyday classics. The trade-off: fewer opening parts and smaller details than 1:18. But many collectors prefer displaying 50 models in a single cabinet versus 12 at the larger scale.
1:12 sits at the opposite extreme. At 35-40 cm, these models reveal details invisible at other scales: brake rotor spokes, tire sidewall markings, stitching on the steering wheel. Prices range from €200 to over €1,000, with GT Spirit, Kyosho, and AUTOart producing the most sought-after 1:12 pieces. These are statement objects — one model can anchor an entire display.
Choosing your scale: 1:18 for the balance of size and detail. 1:43 for variety and budget. 1:12 for a single breathtaking centerpiece.
Diecast vs Resin: Which Is Right for You?
Diecast models are made from metal alloy — heavy, durable, with opening doors and hoods. Resin models are cast from polyurethane — lighter, with smoother paint and sharper panel lines, but fragile and sealed shut. Both materials produce collector-grade replicas, and most serious collections include both.
Diecast gives you interaction. Open the doors, lift the hood, inspect the engine bay. The weight feels substantial — 800g to 1.2 kg at 1:18. Norev, Solido, and AUTOart produce diecast in runs of 2,000 to 20,000 pieces, keeping prices between €30 and €500 depending on brand and detail. Metal molds require higher tooling investment, which is why only well-known car models get the diecast treatment.
Resin prioritizes surface perfection. GT Spirit, Otto Mobile, and BBR cast models in runs of 100 to 1,500 pieces. The material allows cleaner paint application, sharper body gaps, and shapes that metal molds struggle with. But resin is brittle — one drop means chips or cracks — and opening parts are almost nonexistent.
For investment: resin appreciates faster because of smaller runs. A GT Spirit model that retailed at €80 regularly trades at €150-300 within two years. Large-run diecast (5,000+ pieces) rarely appreciates unless it captures an iconic livery or gets discontinued unexpectedly.
Practical split: diecast for display and handling, resin for limited editions and long-term value.
Porsche, Mercedes, BMW — The Most Collected Car Brands in Scale
Porsche is the most collected car brand in scale models worldwide. The 911 alone spans hundreds of model variations across generations — from the 1973 Carrera RS 2.7 to the 2024 992 GT3 RS. Mercedes and BMW follow closely, driven by AMG performance heritage and the M division's cult following.
Porsche collectors chase specific generations, color codes, and limited editions. The 930 Turbo, 964 RS, and 993 GT2 are the most reproduced subjects. Minichamps offers the broadest Porsche catalog (1:18 and 1:43), AUTOart delivers the most engineering detail, and Norev provides the strongest value under €50. Beyond the 911: the Taycan, Cayman GT4, and classic 356 are gaining collector momentum.
Mercedes-Benz covers everything from vintage 300 SL Gullwings to the AMG GT Black Series. The G63, AMG GT, and S-Class are current favorites. Mercedes licenses models to Norev, Minichamps, and AUTOart — guaranteeing accurate colors and specifications.
BMW collectors gravitate toward the M division: E30 M3, E46 CSL, G80 M3 Competition. These remain bestsellers across manufacturers. The Z4, M8, and classic 2002 Turbo round out a strong catalog.
Other high-demand brands: Ferrari (strict licensing makes models scarcer), Lamborghini (dramatic proportions suit scale), Audi (the RS6 Avant is a breakout star), and classic American muscle — Corvette, Mustang, Camaro.
From Norev to AUTOart: Model Car Manufacturers Compared
Model car manufacturers range from high-volume producers like Norev (€35-60 per model) to engineering-focused brands like AUTOart (€200-500). Each occupies a specific niche in quality, scale, and collector appeal — and knowing the differences saves you money and disappointment.
Norev (France): 1:18 diecast with consistent quality and strong car brand licenses — Porsche, Mercedes, Renault, Peugeot. Opening parts, accurate proportions, and reliable paint at €35-60. The best entry point for serious collectors.
GT Spirit (France): 1:18 resin exclusively. Limited runs of 300-1,500 pieces. Known for bold colors and models that other manufacturers skip — Audi RS6, Toyota Supra, AMG GT. No opening parts, but the surface finish is noticeably sharper than diecast at any price.
Minichamps (Germany): Over 30,000 references since 1990 — the broadest catalog in the hobby. Strongest in F1, Porsche, and motorsport liveries. Available in 1:18, 1:43, and 1:12.
AUTOart (Hong Kong): The engineering benchmark. Their Composite series combines metal body panels with resin for complex shapes. Functional suspension, wired engines, photo-etched grilles. €200-500 reflects the detail level — measurably above everything else at 1:18.
Otto Mobile (France): Resin models of cars other manufacturers overlook — Renault 5 Turbo, Peugeot 205 GTI, Volkswagen Corrado. Runs of 100-3,000. Cult following among European collectors.
IXO (Macau/Portugal): The 1:43 workhorse. Hundreds of models at €20-40, strong in rally, Le Mans, and commercial vehicles.
Other names to know: Kyosho, Solido, Spark, Almost Real, BBR, CMC.
Best Diecast Cars for Collectors in 2026
The best diecast cars combine accurate proportions, quality paint, functional details, and a production run small enough to hold value over time. In 2026, the standout models come from AUTOart, Norev, Minichamps, and Almost Real — each at a different price point.
Under €50: Norev 1:18 Porsche 911 (992) — sharp proportions, four opening parts, accurate Porsche color codes. The strongest entry into serious 1:18 collecting. Solido 1:18 BMW M3 (E30) — a classic at a budget price with surprisingly good detail.
€50-100: Almost Real 1:18 Land Rover Defender — exceptional chassis detail, separate components, removable roof. Minichamps 1:18 BMW M3 (G80) — correct M division trim, clean interior.
€100-200: GT Spirit 1:18 Audi RS6 Avant (resin) — the model that defined GT Spirit's reputation. Limited runs sell out within months and appreciate fast. Otto Mobile 1:18 Renault 5 Turbo — a cult car that consistently gains value on the secondary market.
€200+: AUTOart 1:18 Porsche 911 GT3 RS (Composite) — functional suspension, wired flat-six engine, photo-etched components. The closest thing to engineering art at 1:18 scale.
For investment potential, look for production runs under 1,000 pieces, models from discontinued manufacturer lines, and limited-edition colorways that match the real car's special editions. Resin from GT Spirit and Otto Mobile appreciates fastest due to smaller runs.
Are Diecast Cars Worth Collecting? Value, Rarity, and Investment
Diecast and resin model cars regularly appreciate in value after production ends. A GT Spirit 1:18 that retailed for €80 can trade at €150-300 within two years. Models from discontinued manufacturers or in limited colorways have gained 200-500% over a decade.
Every model car has a finite production life. Once the manufacturer exhausts the run — 500 resin pieces or 5,000 diecast — the tooling goes on a shelf. No reprints, no second editions. This scarcity drives the collector market.
What appreciates: Small production runs (under 1,000 units), iconic cars (911 GT3, E30 M3, F40), limited colorways, and models from manufacturers that have ceased certain production lines. AUTOart models from the early 2010s routinely sell at 2-3x their original retail price today.
What holds steady: Mass-produced models in runs of 10,000+ (Maisto, Bburago) rarely gain value. Generic colors — black, silver, white — hold less value than production-specific shades like GT Silver Metallic or Signal Green.
Condition drives price: Factory-sealed models in original packaging command 30-50% premiums over displayed pieces. If you buy with future value in mind, keep the box, the foam inserts, and the original wrapping.
The pre-owned market: Discontinued models circulate collector-to-collector. Prices depend on condition, remaining supply, and current demand. Inspection matters — paint condition, alignment of opening parts, and completeness of fragile accessories (mirrors, antennas, wipers) all affect resale value.
How to Display and Protect Scale Models
The best way to display scale model cars is in a sealed acrylic or glass case that blocks dust, UV light, and accidental contact. For 1:18 models, cases with at least 30 cm interior width work best. For 1:43, stackable 12 cm cases maximize shelf density without crowding.
Display cases range from individual acrylic boxes (€5-15 per model) to wall-mounted cabinets with LED lighting (€50-200+). IKEA DETOLF glass cabinets — roughly €60 each — remain the most popular choice among collectors worldwide. One DETOLF holds 10-12 models at 1:18 or 20+ at 1:43.
Dust settles even inside closed cases over months. Clean diecast with a soft natural-bristle makeup brush, or use a camera lens air blower for contact-free removal. Never use water or cleaning solutions on diecast — moisture triggers zinc corrosion that shows up as bubbling paint years later.
UV protection is critical. Direct sunlight fades paint within months. Resin is especially vulnerable: UV degrades the polymer and yellows light-colored finishes. Position cases away from windows, or invest in UV-filtering acrylic panels.
Temperature stability matters more than most collectors realize. Avoid attics, garages, and unheated basements where temperature swings cause metal expansion and contraction — cracking paint and loosening glued parts over time. A stable 18-24°C environment is ideal.
Rotate displayed models every few months. This distributes UV exposure evenly and gives you a regular opportunity to inspect for developing issues.
How to Buy Scale Model Cars Online
When buying scale model cars online, look for stores that photograph each model individually instead of using manufacturer stock images. Real product photography reveals actual paint condition, part alignment, and packaging integrity — details that matter most for pre-owned and discontinued pieces.
What separates a good model car shop from a mediocre one:
Photography: Manufacturer renders and stock images hide imperfections. A diecast car store that handles and photographs every model before listing has physically inspected it. For pre-owned models, where condition varies piece to piece, this is the difference between confidence and guesswork.
Packaging: Standard cardboard and bubble wrap is not enough for diecast. A 1:18 model weighs 800g-1.2 kg — enough to break through single-wall packaging in transit. Multi-layer protection with foam inserts, rigid cardboard, and padded outer boxes keeps damage rates below 0.5%.
Returns: A clear return policy (14 days minimum) signals the store stands behind its inventory. Some sellers of pre-owned models exclude returns, citing "condition subjectivity" — but that shifts all risk to you as the buyer.
Condition grading: For pre-owned models, look for specific descriptions. "Mint in box" should mean factory-sealed in original packaging. "Excellent" should mean displayed but with zero visible wear. Vague terms like "good condition" leave too much room for surprises.
International shipping: Scale model collecting is a global market. Stores that ship worldwide with tracking and insurance give you access to discontinued models unavailable in your country — which is often where the most valuable pieces are found.