New vs used: Which should you buy in 2026?
Is it better to dodge initial depreciation with a quality used buy, or invest in the long-term peace of mind of a lengthy warranty and service plan? Between shifting interest rates and fluctuating trade-in values, the “right” choice rarely comes down to just the sticker price. We break down the data and help you decide between new vs used.
The recently lowered prime lending rate (down to 10.25% in March 2026) has made vehicle financing significantly more attractive than 3 or 4 years ago. And while South African car owners tend to hang on to their cars for longer during such periods of strained affordability, the sharp ones that do take the plunge look beyond the monthly debit order. Instead, they focus on longer-term value retention – the percentage of the original price the car retains after 3 to 5 years. Which is where wallet wisdom comes into the new-or-used debate.
Depending on vehicle type, in 2026 and at current interest rates, the breakeven point where a car is worth more than the settlement balance sits at around month 42 of a 72-month instalment period for high-retention brands like Toyota or Suzuki.
That’s opposed to month 60 of high-depreciation brands like Alfa Romeo, Maserati and Jaguar, as well as specific models such as the BMW 7 Series, Mercedes S-Class and Audi e-tron.
The latter luxury vehicles, if you are wondering, are challenged by consumer perception over technological obsolescence, niche appeal and uncertainty of service and parts.
Do the sums: Calculate your monthly repayments
The 2026 depreciation curve: Why “nearly new” is the new “brand new”
The sweet spot for a used car is one that’s past the initial 20-30% depreciation cliff (generally lost in the first year), yet still feels fresh enough to make you feel you’re getting a showroom steal. In 2026, these 2-to-3-year-old models make up nearly half of the used-vehicle market.
It’s obvious why. If such a vehicle was sold with a 5-year factory warranty, there would be another 2 or 3 years of peace-of-mind ownership left.
Furthermore, certain models, such as the Toyota Hilux and Fortuner, enjoy extraordinary long life cycles during which only modest sprinklings of updates are added throughout that period. That means they usually remain mechanically unaltered.
| Considerations | New car | Used car |
| Due diligence/history check required | None | Yes. Service/crash/VIN record lookup essential |
| Personalisation options | Yes | No |
| Available finance types | More options available through in-house finance, e.g. prime/sub-prime/guaranteed future value buyback | Standard instalment sale |
| Insurance cost | Higher owing to increased replacement value | Lower |
| Depreciation | Steepest (20%+ in Year 1) | Lower |
| Tech/safety | Latest-gen | Could be up to 1-2 generations behind |
Total cost of ownership: financing & insurance in a shifting economy in 2026
Before getting ready to sign on the dotted line, a must-consider is the total cost of ownership of a vehicle. Having – allegedly – crunched the numbers, this is where matters can become confusing to the uninitiated.
It may well be the case that a used car costs less than a new one, yet owing to South Africa’s recently reduced prime lending rate, the availability of in-house finance or arrangement with a preferred provider, a new car may be sold with the same interest rate that may make the used one appear less appealing.
Read more: Consult our latest Vehicle Trade-in Guide
However, interest rates and instalments are just 2 pieces of the total ownership cost picture. Fuel and maintenance aside, insurance on a new car with a high-repair-to-value ratio – sporting expensive-to-replace features such as LED headlamps or an advanced safety suite – will most certainly be higher than a used one that’s already suffered its depreciation cycle as well as presenting a lower replacement cost to the insurer. An older car is equipped with more established luxury and safety accoutrements, backed up by a pool of parts and repair know-how.
It’s also worth knowing that annual insurance premium increases have tracked ahead of the Consumer Price Index in 2026 owing to the rising cost of imported electronic componentry.
Once a year, owners (present and future) should update their policies in line with their current vehicle value, a task than can be simplified using our Cars.co.za’s free online evaluation tool.
The digital handover: navigating the hybrid buying process
The advent of the Internet, online shopping tools and AI has completely transformed the car-buying process. Today, no new tech intervention exists without a catchy buzzphrase to frame it; and in the autosphere that word is the somewhat eye roll-worthy “phygital”.
What phygital means is savvy shoppers do all of their research online, playing with configurators, virtual walk-arounds and pulling up AI generated history reports. Recommendations are personalised and finance instantly pre-approved.
Crucially, though, the “last-mile” of the shopping process remains analogue. At some point, even the savviest shopper looking to minimise the trust gaps still goes into a bracelet-wearing salesman’s office that smells of old smoke and desperation. To see if the deal is real, touch and feel the prospective purchase, and request a test drive.
Warranty vs out-of-pocket: Managing maintenance risks
Where the nearly-new buy does lose out against a new equivalent is on aftersales. Even if some of its residual factory warranty carries over to the next owner, the older a vehicle, the fewer free services remain. So, inevitably, you’re going to start maintaining that vehicle out-of-pocket sooner.
It’s therefore advisable to familiarise yourself with your chosen vehicle’s service schedule before buying. A new Volkswagen Polo is sold with 3 services included that are carried out at every 15 000 km in the first 3 years. If you get your hands on an example that’s only covered 25 000 km, the next two services are free. At 35 000 km, there’s only one left.
Blue Oval blues
Ford fans beware: depending on first-owner choice, some models won’t even have a service plan at all. In alignment with Right to Repair guidelines, since July 2021 buyers of new Fords could opt out of service plans at the point of purchase. Eyeing a cheap Raptor? VIN check first. In 2026, verifying that 17-digit number (and 2025 recall compliance) is the only way to avoid an out-of-pocket servicing shock.
Find a used Ford Ranger on Cars.co.za
Lower interest rates have made settling for a nearly-new vehicle even more appealing. Shopping smartly means looking beyond the price and factoring in all other costs to lock down the strongest residual value down the road. Be patient, request a battery health report if you’re buying an EV, be critical and don’t buy the first example you see.
Get that right and you’ll save today to own more tomorrow.