2019 Volkswagen Polo
2019 Volkswagen Polo
Est. monthly payment:
R 5,539 p/m
Western Cape
The 2019 Volkswagen Polo 1.0 TSI Comfortline is a reliable and stylish hatchback, perfect for South African buyers seeking a used vehicle with proven performance and affordability. This well-maintained model offers a balance of practicality and driving enjoyment, making it one of the best options for a budget-conscious yet quality vehicle.
Equipped with a fuel-efficient 1.0 TSI petrol engine producing 95 Hp, it features a smooth manual transmission, ideal for those wanting an engaging drive. With a modest 4.6 L/100km fuel consumption, it’s cost-effective for daily commuting. The Polo comfortably seats five across five doors, offering convenience and space for family or friends, packaged in a compact hatchback body.
Located in Bakoven, Cape Town, this used Volkswagen Polo is readily available for test drives and purchase. Interested buyers can explore finance deals and price comparisons to secure the best price. Visit today to experience this affordable, high-quality hatchback firsthand.
CAR OVERVIEW
TECHNICAL DATA
FUEL & EMISSIONS
COLOUR AND UPHOLSTERY
Volkswagen Polo
Volkswagen’s Polo has become the default answer for South Africans who want something a little more upmarket than your average B-segment hatch, but aren’t willing to cough up for a Golf or pay C-segment premiums. You’ll see them everywhere from Sandton to Sea Point, and that’s no accident. It goes toe-to-toe with the Toyota Starlet, Suzuki Swift, and Renault Kiger, but the Polo’s trump card is that blend of everyday polish and badge appeal. Engine choices swing from frugal diesels to peppy petrols, manual and auto boxes, but most shoppers are laser-focused on that 7-speed DSG – and honestly, if you’ve schlepped through Rivonia Road traffic, you’d understand why. Current listings are all over the map: from R69,500 for a high-mileage, decade-old unit to a wallet-wilting R699,995 for a loaded new one. The median sits at R319,500, which is telling: the market’s buoyed by a sea of well-loved used examples, with 203 used units outnumbering the 118 new cars you’ll find on dealer floors. For anyone shopping below R300k, that matters. The 1.0 TSI Life DSG is the Polo you’ll see most often, with 56 listings between R284,900 and R514,540, and the plain 1.0 TSI close behind with 55 options starting at R268,890. Most used Polos show around 51,251 km, which is par for the course if the service book stacks up. At the zippier end, the GTI DSG takes the spotlight: 16 listings from R419,900 up to nearly R700k, and it’s what the Polo should have been from the start if you ask a diehard. The real separation between Polo and its rivals isn’t just the spec sheet. On paper at least, it’s the interior finish and that DSG’s city manners – the Starlet and Swift just don’t feel as civilised inside or as relaxed in the crawl from Fourways to Braamfontein. For the budget-conscious, there’s still a lifeline in those 1.4 Trendline GP-era cars from as far back as 2005, starting at R148,990. If you pack smart, there’s a Polo for nearly every wallet, and that’s the point.
Volkswagen
Volkswagen has its roots dug deep in South African roads, from the township Polo Vivos battered by city taxi ranks to plush Tiguans parked outside Sandton offices. You don’t see many brands straddling so many worlds, and 1,416 active classifieds — from a R59,500 runabout all the way to a plush R2 million Touareg — prove it’s not just marketing fluff. R374,400 is the middle ground, and that’s where most South Africans are actually shopping: not scraping the barrel, not maxing the credit card, just wanting a good car that’ll last. On paper at least, VW’s lineup makes as much sense for first-timers stretching for a Polo Vivo as it does for a fleet boss buying Transporters or a family wanting a Tiguan. There’s a solid split too: 553 new VWs for those who want factory-fresh, 863 used units for anyone chasing the badge without the fresh sticker price. The Polo Vivo is king of the hill with 327 listings from R96,500, and for a reason — it’s still one of the most attainable hatches with decent space and real parts support. Standard Polo buyers (322 listings, up to R699,995) are after that extra polish: turbo engines, a bit more polish inside, the B-segment sweet spot. If you’re tired of hatchbacks, the T-Cross (from R259,500) is the on-ramp into SUVs. Amarok, meanwhile, starts at R219,900 and stretches into territory most Hilux or Ranger drivers wouldn’t imagine, with a cabin that finally feels its price. Golf’s still here from R79,900 to R1,139,900 — proof that the badge matters to enthusiasts. Hatchbacks are everywhere (421 units), petrol still rules, but VW’s plug-in hybrids are starting to give buyers proper alternatives, especially since most rivals are still catching up on tech.
Est. monthly payment:
R 0 p/m
2019 Volkswagen Polo
Est. monthly payment:
R 0 p/m
Vredelust, Cape Town, Western Cape
Volkswagen Polo FAQs
Common questions about the Volkswagen Polo in South Africa.
