2026 Audi Q3
The brand-new 2026 Audi Q3 35 TFSI S tronic Black Edition is the perfect blend of luxury and affordability, now available for sale in South Africa. With its sleek SUV design, this model offers impressive performance and cutting-edge style, making it an ideal choice for discerning buyers seeking a premium vehicle at a competitive price.
Powered by a 150 Hp 35 TFSI petrol engine, this Audi Q3 features a smooth manual transmission and delivers excellent fuel efficiency at just 6.5 L/100km. Practical for everyday use, it comfortably seats five passengers across five doors, offering ample space and versatility. Its sporty yet refined appeal is complemented by advanced features and a stylish black edition finish, ensuring both comfort and sophistication.
Located in Richards Bay, KwaZulu-Natal, this vehicle is ready for viewing and test drives at the local dealer. Contact now for the best price on a new, used, or affordable SUV, and take advantage of finance deals and price comparison options to buy your dream Audi Q3 today.
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Audi Q3
Audi’s Q3 carves out its own lane in the premium compact SUV crowd, sitting just above the Volkswagen T-Roc and staring straight at the BMW X1 and Mercedes-Benz GLA. If you’re after that German prestige badge but don’t want to battle Sandton City’s tight parking bays in an overgrown Q7 – or torch your budget – this is where you’ll land. You’re choosing between petrol and diesel, with the 35 TFSI and 40 TFSI quattro on pump duty and the 35 TDI for those who still care about torque and range. Most models use Audi’s S tronic dual-clutch auto, but you’ll spot the occasional manual if you dip into older listings. Forty-three active cars run the gamut from R79,500 up to R970,090, and that’s telling: you’ve got everything from tired high-milers to showroom-fresh metal here. A median of R733,000 shows where most buyers are actually putting down their money. Sportback Black Edition 35 TDI S tronic models flood the listings, with nine of them priced between R749,996 and R970,090. That coupe-style Sportback roofline? It’s not just for looks – it costs more, and buyers know it. Go back a few years and you’ll find 2.0 TDI quattro S tronic units listed between R169,500 and R239,995, most with around 55,000 km – if you pack smart, that’s proper value, especially compared to overpriced rivals. The 35 TFSI S tronic stretches from R399,900 to R796,900, showing just how varied the Q3 offering is in South Africa. Buyers keep picking the Q3 over the GLA, often because the cabin layout is easier to live with, and the infotainment system doesn’t age like milk after a software update or two. Nineteen new cars, twenty-four used – and that’s the point. If you’re shopping Q3, the best buys are pre-owned, because new isn’t where the smart money goes.
Audi
Audi’s position in South Africa is clear: premium, but with a pragmatic edge. Scan through the 314 Audi listings on auto.co.za and you’ll see just how broad their footprint is, from a leggy A3 at R79,500 to a ballistic RS or S model breaking the R4-million barrier. The real sweet spot? R551,620 — Audi’s median — which has you cross-shopping C-Class and 3 Series, where image, driving feel, and what you’ll get back at trade-in all count for plenty. Audi has always been the thinking professional’s German badge: you want the engineering, but you’d rather avoid the BMW’s hard-edged vibe or the Mercedes flash. Here’s something buyers shouldn’t ignore: 193 used Audis versus 121 new ones. That points to a solid certified pre-owned pipeline, so you can still have the badge without swallowing the full sticker shock. The A1 sets the tone with 70 entries starting at R89,500, keeping things accessible for those after a city runabout that’s a notch above the norm. Right behind, the A3 hatch and sedan rack up 65 listings, and if you pack smart, you’ll find those high-spec versions nudging R900,000. SUVs are the biggest draw — 123 options, with the Q3 and Q5 doing the heavy lifting, and the Q5 peaking at a strong R1.34 million. Want something smaller? The Q2 crossover gets you in from R275,900. Petrol power leads the way, but Audi’s EV and plug-in hybrid models are surfacing, quietly but steadily, and that matters for anyone watching future running costs. Where Audi really stakes its ground is inside: even the base A1 ditches scratchy plastics for proper finishes, which is what the A1 should have been from the start. For South Africans wanting premium without the pretence, there’s a logic to Audi’s lineup that’s hard to ignore.
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2026 Audi Q3
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Audi Q3 FAQs
Common questions about the Audi Q3 in South Africa.
