New Vehicle Sales Growth Holds Firm Following SA Investment Conference Amid Rising Global and Domestic Pressures

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naamsa releases March 2026 new vehicles sales stats

 

South African new vehicle market extended its domestic growth trajectory in March 2026, buoyed by domestic macro-economic support, even as the broader macroeconomic environment begins to shift towards a more constrained outlook.

Aggregate domestic new vehicle sales in March 2026, at 58,060 units, the best March figures since 2007, reflected an increase of 8,560 units, or 17,3%, compared to the 49,500 vehicles sold in March 2025. Export sales decreased to 37,388 units, representing a loss of 5,3% compared to the 39,499 vehicles exported in March 2025.

naamsa underscores that the March 2026 performance reflects continued resilience in domestic demand, underpinned by improved consumer and business conLdence, supportive inflation dynamics earlier in the quarter, and the lagged beneLts of cumulative interest rate reductions. However, the external environment has shifted materially over recent weeks, introducing new risks that will likely shape demand conditions in the months ahead.

Overall, out of the total reported industry sales of 58,060 vehicles, an estimated 51,481 units, or 88,7%, represented dealer sales, an estimated 5,5% represented sales to the vehicle rental industry, 3,2% to government sales, and 2,6% to industry corporate fleets - a composition indicative of sustained retail resilience.

The March 2026 new passenger car market at 39,370 units recorded an increase of 6,054 units, or 18,2%, compared to the 33,316 new cars sold in March 2025. Car rental sales accounted for 6,5% of new passenger vehicles sold during the month. Domestic sales of new light commercial vehicles (bakkies and mini-buses) at 15,557 units during March 2026 recorded a gain of 2,112 units, or 15,7% compared to the 13,445 units sold in March 2025. 

Sales in the medium and heavy commercial vehicle segments reflected a positive performance during March 2026. Medium commercial vehicle sales at 823 units recorded a 14,0% increase compared to the 722 units sold in March 2025, while heavy trucks and buses, at 2,310 units, reflected a 14,5% increase compared to the 2,017 units sold in March 2025. Investment decisions in these segments remain closely linked to infrastructure spending, freight volumes, electricity costs, and overall business confidence.

Exports remained under pressure in the month of March 2026 with vehicle export sales at 37,388 units, reflecting a decrease of 2,111 units, or 5,3%, compared to the 39,499 vehicles exported in the corresponding month last year. The industry’s export performance continues to face structural headwinds amid geopolitical turbulence.

SA INVESTMENT CONFERENCE 

March new vehicle sales come a day after the South Africa Investment Conference, reinforcing the close alignment between market performance and the country’s evolving economic policy direction. As noted by naamsa COO, Mrs Shinny Gobiyeza, “the President’s address signals a clear shift towards investmentled growth, infrastructure expansion, energy transition and industrialisation,” positioning the automotive sector squarely within South Africa’s broader economic strategy. The address underscores a transition from recovery to expansion, with manufacturing identified as a central pillar of growth—creating a supportive policy environment for the industry through localisation, export competitiveness, and continued industrial policy frameworks such as the APDP and SAAM 2035.

The emphasis on decarbonisation and green industrialisation introduces a pivotal shift for the sector. As the naamsa COO highlights, “the explicit reference to electric vehicle manufacturing and battery storage confirms that the government sees the automotive industry as part of the green industrialisation strategy.” This reframes the transition to New Energy Vehicles (NEVs) as an industrial and investment opportunity rather than merely a compliance requirement. The integration of critical minerals into this strategy further strengthens South Africa’s potential role in global EV value chains, spanning battery production, fuel cell technologies, and component localisation—areas where coordinated engagement across mining, energy, and manufacturing policy will be essential.

Equally significant are the structural reforms in logistics, infrastructure, and energy, which directly impact industry competitiveness. The naamsa COO notes that “logistics reform remains one of the most important policy areas for improving export competitiveness,” particularly through rail and port modernisation and increased private sector participation. Combined with a R1 trillion infrastructure pipeline and ongoing energy reforms aimed at stabilising electricity supply, these developments create a more enabling environment for industrial expansion. Alongside a more pragmatic approach to B-BBEE and a renewed investment mobilisation drive, the policy framework presents a coherent opportunity for the automotive industry to scale investment, deepen localisation, and strengthen its role as a key driver of South Africa’s industrial growth.

MACRO-ECONOMIC VARIABLES

South Africa’s domestic macroeconomic environment remained cautiously supportive in early 2026, although increasingly vulnerable to external shocks. Consumer confidence improved to -7 index points, its strongest level since late 2024, driven by earlier interest rate cuts and improved financial conditions. However, this recovery has been uneven, largely benefiting higher-income households, while lowerincome groups continue to face pressure from elevated living costs and weak employment conditions, limiting broad-based demand. In contrast, business confidence strengthened more decisively, reaching 47 index points, above its long-term average and the highest since 2015 outside the post-pandemic rebound. Notably, new vehicle dealers recorded a 13-year high in confidence at 67 index points, aligning with the sustained recovery in domestic vehicle sales.

Inflation trends initially provided meaningful support, with headline and core inflation both moderating to 3.0% year-on-year in February 2026, alongside declining fuel and food prices and subdued producer cost pressures. However, this outlook deteriorated sharply due to rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, which pushed global oil prices significantly higher. The resulting fuel price increases in April, R3.06 per litre for petrol and up to R7.51 for diesel, are expected to raise transport and logistics costs across the economy. In response, the temporary R3 per litre reduction in the general fuel levy by the National Treasury offers short-term relief, helping to cushion households and businesses against the immediate inflationary impact

While this measure will provide important short-term support to disposable incomes and operating costs - and by extension, the total cost of vehicle ownership - it does not fully offset the magnitude of the underlying energy price shock. As such, the broader inflationary impulse remains intact, albeit moderated at the margin. Importantly, however, this intervention is viewed within a wider macro-Lnancial context, whereby the South African Reserve Bank’s [SARBs] decision to maintain the repo rate follows a period in which cyclical recovery had begun to signal a potential transition toward more durable, structural growth in the domestic market. naamsa anticipates that the wave of recovery resulting from the 150bp point cuts since September 2024 will be able to create the much-needed resilience to sustain demand in the upcoming months.

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