Ford Motor Company of Southern Africa has unveiled a comprehensive refresh for its bestselling Ranger pickup, set to roll out across local dealerships in the first half of 2026. This update responds directly to shifting customer preferences, blending enhanced performance options with streamlined trim choices to better serve everyone from fleet operators to weekend adventurers. As reported by Cars.co.za, the revised lineup maintains the Ranger’s status as a versatile workhorse while introducing fresh appeal in a market where double-cab bakkies dominate sales, accounting for over 70 per cent of light commercial vehicle registrations in 2025. With the current generation already proving its mettle—claiming 25,552 domestic sales in 2024, the highest since 2018—these changes aim to sustain momentum amid a pickup segment projected to grow by 8.2 per cent annually through 2030, according to Statista data on South Africa’s automotive trends.
The new catalogue sharpens the Ranger’s focus without overcomplicating choices, featuring three Single Cab variants for pure utility, seven Super Cabs for added passenger flexibility, and 13 Double Cabs tailored for family or lifestyle use. This represents a modest expansion for Super Cabs with two newcomers, while trimming two from the Double Cab roster to eliminate overlap. A standout addition is the Sport trim, debuting on both Super Cab and Double Cab bodies as a value-packed mid-tier option nestled between the capable XLT and premium Wildtrak. Previously exclusive to the Everest SUV sibling, the Sport badge brings sporty styling cues—like bold alloy wheels and unique badging—without inflating the price tag, appealing to buyers seeking a balance of ruggedness and refinement in South Africa’s demanding terrains.
Further refining the hierarchy, the limited-edition Wildtrak X sheds its standalone status to become an optional upgrade pack for the standard Wildtrak 4×4 Double Cab. This shift unlocks access to the potent 3.0-litre V6 turbodiesel engine, delivering 184 kW and a muscular 600 Nm of torque—up from the outgoing model’s 2.0-litre bi-turbo setup. The same engine infusion extends to the Tremor off-road specialist and Wildtrak Super Cab, elevating their prowess for towing heavy loads or conquering dusty backroads. As noted by The Citizen, these upgrades address feedback from high-mileage users who favour the V6’s superior low-end pull, which has consistently topped preference surveys since its introduction, comprising over 40 per cent of Ranger orders in recent quarters.
Underpinning these trim tweaks lies the most transformative powertrain shake-up yet. Ford is axing the 2.0-litre bi-turbo diesel entirely, citing its position in an inefficient middle ground between entry-level efficiency and top-end grunt. In its place, lower- and mid-spec models across the board adopt an upgraded 2.0-litre single-turbo diesel, now tuned to 125 kW and 405 Nm for smoother urban cruising and highway overtakes. Buyers can pair it with either a six-speed manual—exclusive to the base 4×4 Single Cab XL—or a sophisticated 10-speed automatic, in 4×2 or 4×4 guises as needed. Bridging the diesel duo arrives the all-new 2.3-litre EcoBoost petrol engine, a turbocharged four-cylinder powerhouse with 222 kW and 452 Nm, mated solely to the 10-speed automatic in rear-wheel-drive configuration. Marking the first petrol option on the standard Ranger in South Africa, it draws from proven applications in models like the Volkswagen Amarok and promises brisk acceleration for those ditching diesel amid fluctuating fuel levies.
The halo Raptor remains untouched as the adrenaline-fueled pinnacle, retaining its 3.0-litre twin-turbo V6 petrol mill with 292 kW and 583 Nm, fine-tuned for Baja-style blasts. Meanwhile, premium trims like the Platinum will receive unannounced enhancements in connectivity, safety, and luxury—think expanded driver assists and over-the-air updates—to keep pace with rivals such as the Toyota Hilux and Isuzu D-Max. Produced at Ford’s Silverton Assembly Plant in Pretoria, which exported a record 66,284 units in 2024 alone—up 15.7 per cent year-on-year despite a 2.2 per cent industry dip—the Ranger continues to anchor South Africa’s light commercial exports at 34.5 per cent of the category. Domestically, it held a 24.3 per cent mid-size pickup share last year, with first-quarter 2025 sales climbing 2.5 per cent to 6,205 units, underscoring its resilience in a market buoyed by infrastructure booms and agricultural recovery.
This refresh arrives as South Africa’s bakkie sector navigates headwinds like rising interest rates and supply chain echoes, yet benefits from a 9.4 per cent Ford sales uptick in early 2025. By prioritising customer-driven tweaks—such as broader V6 availability and petrol versatility—Ford positions the Ranger not just as a tool, but as an extension of diverse lifestyles, from Joburg commutes to Karoo escapades. Full pricing and specs will emerge nearer launch, but early indications suggest competitive entry points around the current R500,000 mark for base models, preserving accessibility in a segment where the Ranger’s blend of local engineering and global tech has long set the benchmark.

