It's rare because most stock vehicles will bottom out their springs or bottom out on the springs bump stop before rubbing. Aftermarket lowering springs will a lot of times come with a shorter bump stop. Different brands of lowering springs have different designs and a lot of them will have fewer coils which will physically allow them to bottom out closer to the chassis which increases the chances of them rubbing.
That totally make sense. The shorter bumpstops issue COULD cause rubbing, absolutely, due to bottoming farther in the stroke and allowing the suspension to be in places it wasn't originally designed to be. I hadn't factored in coil bind, I didn't realize these cars might coil bind before the shock bottomed.
It is helps any, I am running some sticky 205/50-16, 42mm offset, on one set of wheels.
205/40-17= 596mm height
205/50-16= 611mm height (2.6% taller than stock)---one of my track setups
215/40-17= 604mm height (1.3% taller than stock)---your new size
So basically, I've been running a setup that has TWICE the vertical deviation from stock that you're going to run with ZERO issues at the track/autocross/heavily loaded, etc. I would guess you won't have any problems. I can't comment on the extra 5mm less clearance on each side though.