South Africa’s Auto Market Transforms as Budget Brands Gain Ground
South Africa’s automotive sector is undergoing a significant realignment, with Chinese and Indian manufacturers capturing growing market share as consumers increasingly prioritise affordability amid weak economic growth and rising living costs.
Chinese brands, led by Chery, have made rapid inroads since Chery’s 2021 market entry. The company has already become the country’s second-largest car seller, trailing only Toyota, through its Omoda, Jaecoo, and Jetour sub-brands. Indian manufacturers are also expanding their footprint; Mahindra & Mahindra is boosting local production capacity, while Tata Motors has re-entered the market after an absence of several years.
This shift is directly challenging established players from Europe, Japan, and the United States. A notable example is Mercedes-Benz, which is reportedly considering sharing its East London assembly plant with China’s Great Wall Motor to sustain production volumes. The German automaker has used the facility for nearly three decades to export C-Class sedans to the United States under the African Growth and Opportunity Act (AGOA), a trade programme granting duty-free access for certain African goods. However, the future of such export advantages is now uncertain amid evolving U.S. trade policy and broader geopolitical tensions.
The pressures extend beyond new competition. South Africa’s auto industry faces a confluence of challenges: rising production costs, sluggish domestic demand, and a global market pivot toward electric vehicles. The sector’s historical reliance on export-oriented manufacturing is being tested. Local production has steadily declined over the past twenty years; currently, only about one-third of vehicles sold in South Africa are domestically assembled, down from 56% two decades ago.
In response, automakers have consistently urged the government to implement supportive industrial policies and stimulate the domestic market to reverse this trend. The current dynamics underscore a pivotal transition. The rise of price-competitive imports is reshaping consumer preferences, while traditional export-dependent manufacturers must adapt to a less predictable global trade environment. As new entrants scale up operations and incumbents reassess their local strategies, South Africa’s long-term role as a regional automotive manufacturing hub is entering a period of profound adjustment, with implications for employment, investment, and industrial policy.
