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Louis Vuitton is bringing back its classic car rally this fall

By Rachel Cormack 17 July, 2026

The Louis Vuitton Classic Run is back after a 14-year hiatus, and will take place in Italy

Louis Vuitton is reviving a decade-old tradition. The French Maison is holding a classic car run in Italy this September, giving new life to an event that screeched to a halt over a decade ago.

The Louis Vuitton Classic Run was kick-started in 1993, with a challenging drive through the Malaysian jungle. Subsequent races were held across China, France, Italy, and Central Europe, before the event wrapped up in 2012 with a run from Monaco through the Swiss Alps to Venice. Pietro Beccari, who was appointed chairman and chief executive officer of Louis Vuitton in 2023, took part in the Boheme Run from Budapest to Prague via Vienna in 2006, which drove him to reinstate the tradition.

The upcoming Dolomites Run will take place from 1 to 4 September 2026, acting as a perfect prelude for the Formula 1 Italian Grand Prix. (LVMH, the parent company of Louis Vuitton, recently inked a 10-year sponsorship deal with F1, which explains that connection.) The house is inviting the owners of 25 classic cars to take part in the four-day event. It will be free to join this time around, but collectors will be asked to contribute a participation fee in future runs.

The cars at the end of the Serenissima Run in Venice in 2012. Photo by Louis Vuitton

The race will start at Villa Pisani near Venice and end in Monza, with competitors driving approximately 600 kilometres across two days. The designed route will snake through the Dolomites, allowing drivers to experience dramatic mountain passes, leisurely winding roads, and everything in between. Racers will have to drive at an average speed of roughly 50 km/hr and will be subject to time controls, passage checks, average speed trials, and regularity trials.

A Bentley on the Serenissima Run from Monaco through the Swiss Alps to Venice in 2012. Photo by Louis Vuitton

The journey will culminate at the Monza racetrack, where the participating racers and their vintage rides will partake in the opening of the GP. The cars will then be displayed at the Villa Reale in Monza on 5 and 6 September 2026, with members of the public free to visit and check them out. The lineup is expected to include four-wheelers by Bugatti, Maserati and Ferrari manufactured up to 1970.

The race winner will be awarded a trophy designed by Dutch artist Sabine Marcelis and produced by Murano glassmaker Venini. It will, of course, be presented in a bespoke Louis Vuitton trophy trunk.

This story was first published on Robb Report USA. Featured photo by Louis Vuitton