Best vehicle sales month in two years: these were the 50 top sellers in March 2025

The Isuzu D-Max enjoyed a stronger-than-usual sales month, surging to second place overall.

The Isuzu D-Max enjoyed a stronger-than-usual sales month, surging to second place overall.

Image by: Supplied

Published Apr 2, 2025

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March 2025 was the South African new vehicle industry's best sales month in two years, with the market showing incredible resilience in the face of economic uncertainty.

A total of 49,493 new vehicles were sold last month, an increase of 12.5% versus the same month last year, and marking six consecutive months of growth.

Passenger vehicle sales, at 33,447 units, saw an impressive year-on-year gain of 25.3%. However bakkies and light commercial vehicles, at 13,328, declined by 8.4%. Keep in mind that this figure reflects the 2024 discontinuation of the Nissan NP200 half-tonner.

Medium and heavy commercial vehicle sales declined by 1.8% and 0.5% respectively, while industry-wide vehicle exports grew by 7.1%.

The one-tonne bakkies put on a stellar performance, however, with the Isuzu D-Max taking second spot in the bakkie race with an impressive 2,250 sales, and the Ford Ranger also breaching the 2,000 unit mark with 2,179 sales.

The Mahindra Scorpio (1,215) and Nissan Navara (835) also performed better than usual last month.

On the passenger car front, the new-generation Suzuki Swift (1,608) lost some ground to the Volkswagen Polo Vivo (1,703) after its particularly strong start to 2025, while the Toyota Corolla Cross was third with a solid 1,570 sales.

50 top selling vehicles in South Africa: March 2025

  1. Toyota Hilux - 2,923
  2. Isuzu D-Max - 2,250
  3. Ford Ranger - 2,179
  4. Volkswagen Polo Vivo - 1,703
  5. Suzuki Swift - 1,608
  6. Toyota Corolla Cross - 1,570
  7. Hyundai Grand i10 - 1,344
  8. Nissan Magnite - 1,223
  9. Mahindra Scorpio Pik-Up - 1,215
  10. Chery Tiggo 4 Pro - 1,102
  11. Haval Jolion - 1,102
  12. Toyota Starlet - 1,075
  13. Suzuki Fronx - 1,052
  14. Toyota Starlet Cross - 957
  15. Volkswagen Polo - 932
  16. Nissan Navara - 835
  17. Kia Sonet - 817
  18. Toyota Fortuner - 793
  19. Mahindra XUV 3XO - 774
  20. Suzuki Ertiga - 749
  21. Toyota Urban Cruiser - 706
  22. Renault Kwid - 572
  23. Toyota Hi-Ace - 569
  24. Omoda C5 - 559
  25. Suzuki Baleno - 504
  26. Toyota Prado - 495
  27. Toyota Land Cruiser PU - 476
  28. Volkswagen T-Cross - 468
  29. Volkswagen Polo Sedan - 423
  30. Hyundai Exter - 421
  31. Chery Tiggo 7 Pro - 420
  32. GWM P-Series - 402
  33. Toyota Rumion - 399
  34. Renault Kiger - 363
  35. Renault Triber - 350
  36. Ford Everest - 343
  37. Toyota Vitz - 322
  38. Suzuki Jimny - 315
  39. Hyundai i20 - 309
  40. Jetour Dashing - 304
  41. Haval H6 - 303
  42. Hyundai Venue - 303
  43. BMW X1 - 293
  44. BMW X3 - 281
  45. Volkswagen Amarok - 275
  46. Suzuki Eeco - 246
  47. Foton Tunland - 236
  48. Ford Territory - 227
  49. Nissan Magnite PV - 220
  50. Suzuki S-Presso - 216

In the manufacturer race, Toyota led the way as usual, with 11,660 sales, followed by Suzuki Auto (5,284), Volkswagen (4,913), Hyundai (3,103) and Ford (2,907).

But could the looming Value Added Tax (VAT) increase be partly responsible for last month's vehicle sales surge?

“While the pending increase in VAT only amounts to R500 per R100,000 we expect that some purchase decisions will have been accelerated by its imminent implementation,” said WesBank's marketing head Lebo Gaoaketse

“While interest rates remained unchanged during the month, their levels have alleviated some affordability, stimulating demand in the market for new vehicles. WesBank has also experienced a reduction in balloon amounts financed year-on-year, reinforcing the positive improvements in affordability in the market,” Gaoaketse added.

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