Suzuki Swift dominates new car market again - these were the 50 top selling vehicles in February

Although the Toyota Hilux retook the overall lead, Suzuki's Swift continued to dominate the passenger car market. Picture: Supplied

Although the Toyota Hilux retook the overall lead, Suzuki's Swift continued to dominate the passenger car market. Picture: Supplied

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It was another solid month of growth for the South African new vehicle market, as February saw passenger vehicle sales surge by 17% year-on-year.

The Suzuki Swift led this charge, and although slightly down on its stellar January performance that saw a record 2,628 units registered, the new-generation hatchback still dominated the passenger car sector in February with 2,351 sales.

This gave it a comfortable lead over the recently facelifted Volkswagen Polo Vivo, which found 2,187 homes last month.

Overall top seller: Toyota's Hilux. Picture: Supplied

However, on the overall leaderboard the Toyota Hilux rose to its usual top position with 2,683 sales, followed by the Ford Ranger at 2,168 and Isuzu D-Max at 1,924. This as the light commercial vehicle market declined by 11.3%, versus the same month last year, as the Nissan NP200’s absence and finance constraints in the minibus taxi market continued to weigh on the sector.

The passenger car market, on the other hand, continues to benefit from strong sales to the rental industry, which accounted for 39% of Suzuki Swift sales and 25% of Polo Vivo sales.

Other strong sellers were the Toyota Corolla Cross (1,435), Toyota Starlet (1,279) and Hyundai Grand i10 (1,253), with the latter two seeing significant rental market penetration, accounting for 36% and 18% of their respective totals.

50 top selling vehicles in South Africa: February 2025

  1. Toyota Hilux - 2,683
  2. Suzuki Swift - 2,351
  3. Volkswagen Polo Vivo - 2,187
  4. Ford Ranger - 2,168
  5. Isuzu D-Max - 1,924
  6. Toyota Corolla Cross - 1,435
  7. Toyota Starlet - 1,279
  8. Hyundai Grand i10 - 1,253
  9. Chery Tiggo 4 Pro - 1,147
  10. Suzuki Fronx - 1,123
  11. Toyota Starlet Cross - 1,003
  12. Haval Jolion - 982
  13. Toyota Urban Cruiser - 875
  14. Kia Sonet - 873
  15. Volkswagen Polo - 832
  16. Nissan Magnite - 808
  17. Mahindra Scorpio Pik-Up - 763
  18. Renault Kwid - 750
  19. Mahindra XUV 3X0 - 657
  20. Toyota Fortuner - 634
  21. Toyota Hi-Ace - 634
  22. Suzuki Ertiga - 627
  23. Omoda C5 - 552
  24. Toyota Vitz - 551
  25. Toyota Land Cruiser PU - 534
  26. Toyota Rumion - 482
  27. Volkswagen T-Cross - 462
  28. Hyundai Exter - 428
  29. Nissan Navara - 412
  30. Renault Kiger - 400
  31. Chery Tiggo 7 Pro - 384
  32. Toyota Prado - 375
  33. Suzuki Baleno - 360
  34. Volkswagen Polo Sedan - 346
  35. Hyundai i20 - 317
  36. Ford Territory - 304
  37. Volkswagen Amarok - 290
  38. Hyundai Venue - 284
  39. Haval H6 - 274
  40. Suzuki Jimny - 274
  41. Suzuki Grand Vitara - 271
  42. Suzuki S-Presso - 267
  43. Ford Everest - 263
  44. Volkswagen Tiguan - 258
  45. Jetour Dashing - 252
  46. Renault Triber - 247
  47. Nissan Magnite Move - 247
  48. GWM P-Series - 232
  49. Suzuki Eeco - 231
  50. Citroen C3 - 223

15 Top Brands

  1. Toyota - 11,743
  2. Suzuki Auto - 6,044
  3. Volkswagen - 5,249
  4. Hyundai Automotive - 3,074
  5. Ford Motor Company - 2,900
  6. Isuzu Motors SA - 2,298
  7. Chery Auto SA - 1,924
  8. GWM SA - 1,713
  9. Mahindra - 1,610
  10. Nissan - 1,497
  11. Kia - 1,491
  12. Renault - 1,466
  13. BMW Group - 1,256
  14. Omoda and Jaecoo - 772
  15. Stellantis - 501

Outlook for South African vehicle market

February’s vehicle sales grand total amounted to 47,978 units, an increase of 7.3% over the same month in 2024, with passenger cars totalling 33,757 units (up 17%) and LCVs at 11,802 (down 11.3%). They were followed by heavy commercials (12.5% down at 1,698 units) and medium commercials (11.8% up at 721 units).

The vehicle market continues to show resilience in the face of both local and international headwinds, said Naamsa CEO Mikel Mabasa.

“Inflationary risks remain a concern, with NERSA’s 12.74% electricity tariff hike set for April, posing potential cost pressures for manufacturers. Additionally, the unexpected postponement of the 2025 Budget introduced short-term fiscal uncertainty, though consumer resilience, monetary support, and sustained business confidence helped maintain a positive trajectory for overall vehicle sales,” Mabasa said.

Brandon Cohen, Chairperson of the National Automobile Dealers’ Association (NADA) said the growing market share of brands competing in the lower and entry-level segments of the market suggest that affordability is playing a key role in driving sales.

“Additionally, a 0.25% decrease in interest rates at the end of January as well as speculation over a potential VAT increase may have encouraged some buyers to expedite their purchases,” Cohen added.

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