The four questions every car buyer should ask before signing
The four questions every car buyer should ask before signing

Photo credits to Ziyaad Plaatjes
Buying a new car is exhilarating. The smell of the interior, the way the keys feel in your hand, the mental image of pulling into the driveway for the first time. It is a milestone, and it should feel that way. If you’re buying a new car, you’ve worked hard and the excitement is earned. While it is a happy moment, that excitement can sometimes drown out some of the practical questions.
The first thing to consider carefully is the instalment.

A payment that feels manageable today could feel different tomorrow. School fees tend to rise. Fuel prices shift. Groceries inch upward. Interest rates move in cycles. A monthly commitment that works comfortably now can become a source of strain when two or three of those pressures arrive at once. A useful exercise is to stress-test the number. Add R1,000 or R2,000 to your current monthly expenses and ask whether the repayment still fits. If it does, you are likely in a sustainable position. If the arithmetic becomes uncomfortable, it may be worth considering a lower purchase price, a larger deposit, or a longer term to bring the monthly commitment to a figure that holds up under pressure. When picking a longer term it will also be helpful to consider the balloon payments and the fact that over a longer period, interest rates may increase the total amount you pay.
Another thing to consider is that life is rarely static.
South Africa's working landscape has shifted considerably over the past few years and coming technological shifts promise to disrupt that even further. Commission-based roles, contract positions and small business income all carry variability that salaried employment does not. Even within stable employment, life events like parental leave, illness, a career transition can alter monthly income in ways that are difficult to predict at the point of purchase. The question is not whether your income will ever change. For most people, it will. The more useful question is whether your vehicle finance agreement has room to absorb that change. Understanding your repayment obligations in a reduced-income scenario is part of buying responsibly.
Protection is very important to think about.
Credit life insurance is a product many buyers encounter at the point of sale, often without fully understanding what it covers or why it matters. In the event of death, disability, retrenchment or critical illness, credit life insurance can settle or reduce the outstanding balance on your vehicle finance protecting both you and your family from inheriting that obligation during an already difficult period.
Payment relief options are equally worth understanding before they are needed. Knowing what your finance provider offers in terms of restructuring or deferral and what the qualifying conditions are means you are not reading the fine print for the first time in a moment of financial stress.
Finally, it’s important to realise that there is a meaningful difference between a vehicle that is affordable and one that is comfortable. That gap is where lifestyle inflation tends to live. The newer model, the upgraded trim, the extended features: each one nudges the repayment higher, sometimes beyond what a buyer's long-term budget can sustain without sacrifice elsewhere.
Peace of mind is not just about the car. It is about how you feel about your finances six months later, and two years later, when the novelty has settled and the commitment remains.
*Information provided by the publicist.
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