Out of plan, out of pocket? Your guide to extending car coverage in 2026
Why do so many premium European cars hit the used market when they’re nearly 5 years old? For owners, the looming “month-61” maintenance plan expiry is a major financial cliff. If you aren’t ready to sell your car, here is your 2026 guide to service, maintenance and warranty extensions, plus 3rd-party cover.
For some people who survived the pandemic, 2021 was a good year. You still got to work from home and witness history being made as Max Verstappen spectacularly smashed Lewis Hamilton’s F1 stronghold. You might have even rewarded yourself with a new European luxury vehicle in celebration of it all.
Except now, 5 years later, with 100 000 km looming on the odo and no more free services on the horizon due to the maintenance plan imminently expiring, you’re praying, not celebrating. Do you sell the car; extend its factory plan; buy an aftermarket one; or just close your eyes and pay out of pocket for all future services?
Why month 61 is the most expensive month in motoring
Have you ever wondered why 5-year-old BMWs, Audis, Mercedes-Benzes and Volvos (and some Porsches) with between 90 000 and 100 000 km on the clock come up for sale with such uncanny regularity?
The answer is less about fear of a breakdown after years of abuse as much as it is fear over impending financial ruin. That’s because all of these brands’ factory maintenance plans expire after 5 years. Had you bought one in April 2021 or later in the same year, the original plan that guaranteed you care- and cost-free comprehensive maintenance for 5 years will soon be ending.
Considering the cost of imported parts, coupled to fortune-flattening labour rates at the dealer, there’s every reason for owners of such cars to be fearful of servicing them there in the future.
The good news is there are options. The bad news is none of them are perfect.
Beyond the factory warranty: Top-ups, 3rd-party providers & sinking funds
Drastic option 1st: With the 5-year/100 000 km cutoff (whichever comes first) looming, you can sell or trade in your car for a new one and continue benefitting from worry-free maintenance. Perhaps it was bought under a guaranteed future value deal. The latter, though, does present its own long-term financially impacting choices.
Read more: How car depreciation affects the value of a car
The problem, however, is that owing to financial pressures and salaries not keeping up with vehicle price inflation, most South Africans keep their cars for longer than 5 years. For that reason alone, paying for services beyond 5 years until you sell is unavoidable.
There are 3 out-of-warranty servicing options: topping up your OEM plan; a 3rd-party warranty; or going it alone and dipping into your savings. Each has its pros and cons.
| Cover type | OEM plan top-up | 3rd-party warranty | Your savings |
| Best for | Newer cars with low mileage | Older cars or tight monthly budgets | Savers & DIY enthusiasts |
| Coverage | Comprehensive (wear & tear included) | Major mechanical/electrical only | Whatever needs repairing |
| Provider | Manufacturer | Insurers | Your own savings account |
| Cost impact | High upfront cost or monthly add-on | Low monthly premium (R300-R800) | Varies. Depends on vehicle age, condition, type and nature of repairs |
| Pros | Maximum resale value; OEM parts | Fixed monthly cost; peace of mind | Amounts are flexible |
| Cons | Extremely high cost | Claims limits and strict T&Cs | Saving demands discipline; potential price shocks for unforeseen repairs |
Maintenance vs service plan: Understanding the gap in your 2026 coverage
If, by now, you think you’ve found an aftermarket servicing package that won’t melt your wallet, you need to stay sharp over what you’re signing for, and critically, what you’re not.
The fine print matters, likely more than in any other contract you’ll ever sign.
Why? South Africans tend to use the terms “service plan” and “maintenance plan” interchangeably without understanding the critical distinction between the two. A service plan comprises replacement of breadcrumb components such as oil, filters and spark plugs. Everything else is extra. (Ever notice the suspicious regularity with which dealers call and urge you to replace the wiper blades every single time you service your car, even if you live in the Richtersveld?)
While a service plan does not cover wear and-tear-items, the dealer will still stamp your car’s service book. And that’s essential for keeping its residual value.
By contrast, for maximum budget-blowing-but-peak peace of mind, there’s the maintenance plan: an eat-as-much-as-you-like option that covers repair and/or replacement of everything except tyres.
| Service plan | Maintenance plan | |
| Primary goal | Basic, scheduled servicing | Comprehensive mechanical protection |
| Filters & oils | Included | Included |
| Spark plugs | Included | Included |
| Brake Pads/discs | Excluded | Included |
| Wiper blades | Excluded | Included |
| Clutch/gearbox | Excluded (major expense) | Included (wear & tear) |
| Labour costs | Only for scheduled items | Covered for all mechanical repairs |
There’s also no 1-size-fits-all classification among 3rd-party warranties. The latter is usually referred to as mechanical breakdown insurance and can roughly be divided into basic, standard and comprehensive tiers spanning a variety of vehicle ages, cover requirements and payout limits, each at an appropriate cost.
It’s worth checking the fine print for a claim cap versus a covered component count. Lower tiers may still provide cover, but at a reduced cap, in which case you’ll have to fund the shortfall.
A higher count number may sound impressive, but the 2 non-negotiables are engine and gearbox.
And remember, such plans provide cover only against mechanical breakdown, not wear and tear.
The luxury-car dilemma: Should you sell at year 5 or risk out-of-plan costs?
The sheer amount of variables unique to each vehicle and its history explains why, somewhat annoyingly, BMW, Audi and Mercedes-Benz (our sample of 3 for this article) provide only scant details about the cost of extending their comprehensive maintenance plans beyond 100 000 km. The reason? A hard-and-fast R40k-per-annum may scare off prospective customers, but might be appealing to someone whose BMW M5 has a blown turbo and a worn-out mechatronics unit.
| Provider | Extension name | Estimated cost (1 year/20 000 km) | Key coverage | Service provider |
| BMW | Motorplan extension | R30,000- R45,000+ | All-inclusive: service, wear & tear, mechanical/electrical | BMW dealer |
| Audi | Freeway Plan Extension | R28,000-R42,000+ | Full maintenance (up to 15 years/300 000 km) | Audi dealer |
| Mercedes-Benz | PremiumDrive Top-Up | R32,000-R50,000+ | Service, maintenance, fair wear & tear | Mercedes-Benz dealer |
| 3rd party | Maintenance/warranty | R8,000-R15,000 | Major components only, limited cover | RMI-accredited workshops |
| Out-of-pocket | Independent specialist | R5,000-R12,000 | Basic major service and essential wear/tear | Private specialist |
Analysing the above costs, it would seem the most obvious and sensible course of action would be to cut your losses and immediately sell your car…
Read more: How much should you spend on a car
On the other hand, however much of luxury tax a maintenance extension appears to be, it’s also a slam-dunk way of protecting your premium vehicle’s residual value. Not only does the car’s dealer-certified service history get extended, you also provide a peace-of-mind promise to the next owner.
Still unsure? Your car’s current value is the key. Even after 100 000 km, you’d be far more inclined to protect (and hopefully be able to afford) a car with a 7-digit residual with a R40k/year maintenance extension than you would feel about a R300k one. If it’s the latter, it’s time to start repairing privately, where you can save 60% on labour and parts.
Read more: Selling Your Car in South Africa – Everything You Need to Know
Once extending the maintenance plan exceeds 15% of the vehicle’s trade-in value, it’s time to sell. That’s the industry rule-of-thumb where a reliable asset is deemed a financial liability. Most premium cars’ instalments equate to 1.5 to 2% of their total value, or roughly 18 to 24% of their value spent on financing per year. Once a maintenance plan extension reaches 15% of the total vehicle cost, you’re essentially paying new-car money for the upkeep of an old one.
By now, it’s obvious that out-of-warranty repairs for German executive cars are a tug-of-war between your financial resilience and appetite for risk. While it’s far from palatable paying so much for maintenance after 5 years, playing the numbers correctly removes the guesswork. And that will keep you winning up to the day you decide to eventually sell.