South Africa’s automotive industry is set to receive long-awaited support after government confirmed a new tax incentive aimed at accelerating the local production of new energy vehicles. From March 2026, vehicle manufacturers will be able to deduct 150% of qualifying investments made in facilities, machinery and equipment used to enable or expand NEV production, providing a material boost to capital spending plans.
According to National Treasury policy guidance, the incentive will apply for a decade, with the tax-deductible portion capped at R500 million in the first year. Eligible vehicles include hybrids, battery-electric models and hydrogen-powered cars. The measure follows sustained lobbying by the industry, which has warned that South Africa risks losing relevance in global automotive supply chains as major markets shift rapidly towards cleaner technologies.
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The sector remains one of the country’s largest employers, directly supporting more than 115,000 jobs and underpinning over 500,000 positions across the broader value chain. However, export demand has increasingly favoured NEVs, particularly in Europe, South Africa’s biggest vehicle export destination. As reported by European Automobile Manufacturers Association data, around 65% of vehicles sold in Europe during the first eleven months of 2025 were hybrid or fully electric, sharply reducing demand for traditional petrol and diesel models.
Local production has struggled to keep pace with this transition. Only a limited number of hybrids are currently manufactured in South Africa, while plug-in hybrid models produced by BMW, Ford and Mercedes-Benz are largely destined for export markets. At the same time, competition from Chinese manufacturers offering competitively priced NEVs has intensified pressure on domestic sales and margins.
Structural challenges have compounded these pressures. Rising electricity costs and ongoing supply constraints have forced manufacturers to invest heavily in alternative energy solutions, while higher tariffs in key markets and disruptions in steel supply have added to input costs. Industry leaders have also raised concerns about the carbon intensity of South Africa’s electricity grid, which could expose locally produced vehicles to future carbon border penalties.
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Regional competition has sharpened further as Morocco, supported by extensive EV incentives and cleaner energy infrastructure, overtook South Africa as Africa’s largest vehicle producer in 2025. According to Organisation Internationale des Constructeurs d’Automobiles figures, Morocco surpassed one million units, while South Africa’s output lagged below 600,000 vehicles over a comparable period.
While the new tax incentive is expected to stabilise investment and protect jobs, analysts note that it may need to be complemented by consumer-side measures, cleaner energy reforms and targeted industrial policy. Without broader support, the risk remains that South Africa’s automotive sector could continue to lose ground in an increasingly electrified global market.

