Best small car for city driving in 2026
South Africa is big sky country. That’s why bakkies are the best-selling vehicles here. But it doesn’t mean there isn’t a role for clever, compact cars.
The best small car for city driving will always beat a much more expensive bakkie or luxury SUV when parking space is limited.
Even the best 540-degree camera overlay feed isn’t going to help you when you try to park a huge double-cab bakkie in a tight Sandton City parking bay. Try not to scratch it as you edge it in between a pillar and another bakkie, which is already parked right on the white line. That’s peak-parking anxiety.
The truth is that, despite the available space in South Africa, the urban driving environment can still be narrow. Legacy Cape Town suburbs are known for their very narrow roads, with tiny parking spaces and very tight junctions. In Gauteng, you might encounter office developments with underground parking areas that are space-optimised, resulting in very little space to manoeuvre.
Small cars are parking heroes
Everyone gets nervous about parking, even experienced drivers. When in a rush, with excited passengers waiting to get out and to a venue, even the best drivers can suffer lapses in concentration and kerb a rim. That’s a surefire way to ruin entire evening.
The solution is buying the best small car for city driving. Petite cars are the easiest to park and have the added benefit of being lightweight, making them inherently fuel-efficient, too.
What makes the best small car for city driving? Size, obviously. The smaller the exterior dimensions, the less risk you have of scratches or bodywork contact with other parked vehicles, pillars, or walls. But it’s not only about size. It’s about wheels, steering geometry, and clearances, too. That’s why some compact cars that look very similar in size have larger or smaller turning circles, which directly influence their ability to park more easily.
Small cars and highway speeds
A compact car needs to be drivable, not just a parking hero. In the South African context, that means you have to consider that driving speeds on highways are high. And altitude-induced power losses in Gauteng are real. That means there’s a real distinction when choosing a small car for city driving in South Africa, between coastal and Gauteng zones. What works in Cape Town or Durban might feel too slow and underpowered in Gauteng.
Then there’s the safety issue. South Africa has very low vehicle crash-safety regulations, and the truth is that some of the ultra-affordable A-segment models aren’t particularly safe. Some have very poor crash test results, often only 1 star or even 0. That’s why we haven’t included very small cars with poor crash-safety scores.
The other issue for South Africans trying to work smarter with their motoring budget in cities is fuel economy. And that’s tricky because South Africa has such a difference in altitude between its coastal and inland cities. A small, light car with a small engine might have enough power to get you along in Cape Town or Durban, but in Gauteng at altitude, it could lose too much power. That means you’ll be using a lot more throttle to maintain average driving speeds on the highway, and that’s when the fuel economy starts to suffer.
Swift Swift
Suzuki’s very popular VW Vivo/Polo alternative is much cheaper than the Polo and more advanced than the Vivo.
The Swift is compact and has a 9.6-metre turning circle, making it easier to park than a Vivo or a Polo, which both need a bit more space to turn.
A modern design and very decent in-cabin infotainment make the Swift a good city car, with all smartphone play-listing and device syncing you need when stuck in traffic. It’s safe too, with all models featuring dual front, side and curtain airbags and standard ESP.
The Swift’s only weakness is the lack of a turbocharged engine. All Swifts use the same 1.2-litre 3-cylinder petrol engine. It’s robust and durable, but at 60 kW and 112 Nm, it’s no overtaking hero at Gauteng altitudes fully loaded with passengers.
Buy a new or used Suzuki Swift on Cars.co.za
Polo Vivo
The older version of VW’s current global Polo, this VW competes with Swift for the title of South Africa’s most popular hatchback.
The Vivo isn’t quite as easy to park as a the Swift. Why? Well, its turning is 1 metre larger at 10.6 metres.
Where the Vivo is better than the Swift is in the engine options. Like the 1.6-litre four-cylinder, with 77 kW, which has a lot more power than a Swift’s 1.2 with only 60 kW. VW also offers the 1.0 TSI engine, a turbocharged unit that produces 81 kW, making it an excellent choice for drivers at altitude in Gauteng.
Vivo’s design age really shows in its interior architecture. The rear seats don’t have a 60/40 split, so there’s no flat loadspace in the back when you need to move big, bulky things. And the footrest is essentially useless if you wear anything larger than a size-40 shoe, which is something to be aware of if you do a lot of multi-hour driving stints, where left-leg rest becomes a real thing.
Buy a new or used VW Polo Vivo on Cars.co.za
Tata Tiago
One of South Africa’s most affordable cars from India’s most important company. Tata might have a challenging reputation in South Africa but Tiago is one of the ‘new-generation’ Tatas, designed to win over South Africans since the brand relaunched here in late 2025.
Indian cities have some of the world’s densest traffic conditions and incredibly challenging parking. That’s why the Tiago has a very competitive 9.8-metre turning circle, better than a Vivo’s and nearly matching a Swift’s.
Tiago offers a 63 kW 1.2-litre 3-cylinder engine, which is larger and more powerful than anything else in its price range. Most cars priced to rival this Tata are powered by engines that are 1.0 litres or less in size, and can’t match Tiago’s highway driving performance. The Tiago’s 1.2-litre engine might not be turbocharged, so it loses power at altitude. But for the money, it offers better highway performance than anything else in the sub-R200 000 segment.
Issues? The Tiago has no reversing camera or ESP on the base trim version.
Buy a new or used Tata Tiago on Cars.co.za
Smart ForTwo
A very unusual choice but a much smarter used buy than you’d think (no pun intended).
Designed for the narrowest Swiss city roads and over-engineered to European safety standards, this truly is the supercar of compact city cars. And once you look beyond the novelty of the brand name and appearance, ForTwo has very clever engineering.
Smart ForTwo is only 2.7 metres long and 1.66 metres wide. For context, a Suzuki Swift is 3.84 metres long and 1.74 metres wide. There is simply no urban parking space which can defeat the ForTwo. Think the Swift has a good turning circle at 9.6 metres? Well, the ForTwo has a turning circle of only 6.95 metres…
If you want to travel deep into Cape Town for First Thursdays, or park in the smallest corner parking bay at a Gauteng property development, the ForTwo can safely enter and exit spaces that other compact cars just can’t. If parking is the challenge you need to conquer, the ForTwo is just the best small car for city driving, without contest.
Buy a used Smart ForTwo on Cars.co.za
These Smarts are safer than you think
ForTwo is a great little driving car, too. People forget that these Smarts are rear-wheel drive, which means they don’t suffer wheel spin when trying to get up a steep access driveway or parking level ramp in the rain, unlike front-wheel-drive compact hatches.
The Smart has a very short wheelbase, which can make it a bit nervous at highway speeds when there is a strong crosswinds, but Smart’s engineers fitted the ForTwo with crosswind assist to counter that. It also has ESP, which was standard on Smarts years before other compact cars in South Africa had it.
Beyond the clever active safety, it also features a very robust safety cell. Making ForTwo much safer in a crash than you’d think for a vehicle of its size. That safety cell, which also features floor-section impact beams, is made from a combination of high- and ultra-high-strength steel. And that’s important because some of South Africa’s newer budget hatchbacks have safety cells that don’t feature ultra-high-strength steel…
Beyond being unrivalled as a parking hero, and being robustly safe, the Smart ForTwo also offers good Highveld driving performance. Why? Because the 0.9-litre 3-cylinder petrol engine is turbocharged, which means it makes 66 kW, which is plenty for a car that only weighs around 900 kg.
Unrivalled for parking, rear-wheel drive, safe, and with turbocharged engine options. There’s really nothing else to rival a ForTwo when searching for the best small car for city driving.