2020 Volkswagen Transporter
2020 Volkswagen Transporter
Est. monthly payment:
R 8,206 p/m
Western Cape
The 2020 Volkswagen Transporter T6 C/BUS 2.0 TDi LWB offers a reliable and versatile used panel van ideal for South African businesses seeking affordability and performance. Well-maintained and in excellent condition, this model combines practicality with a reputation for durability, making it a smart buy at an attractive price.
Powered by a 1968L diesel engine paired with a smooth automatic transmission, this Transporter delivers efficient fuel consumption and robust performance. It features five seats and five doors, providing ample space for passengers or cargo, perfect for commercial or personal use. Its practical design ensures ease of access and versatility for various needs.
Located in Bakoven, Cape Town, this vehicle is available for immediate viewing and test drive. Buyers can explore competitive finance deals and compare prices to secure the best value. Contact the dealer today to buy this affordable Volkswagen Transporter and experience the reliability of a trusted brand in South Africa.
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Volkswagen Transporter
Volkswagen’s Transporter plays in a pricey league, and you feel it the moment you compare it to the Ford Transit Custom or the Mercedes-Benz Vito. It’s not the van for every plumber or builder in Gauteng, unless you’re billing Sandton rates. All 57 listings currently on offer run the same 2.0 TDI diesel, but the power delivery depends on which badge is stuck on the back — from a no-nonsense 110 kW to a punchier 146 kW BiTDI. Gearbox options keep it interesting: manual, automatic, or the sharp-shifting DSG. The price ladder is massive: R199,995 gets you into an older, probably well-worn example, but if you wander up to R1,526,510 you’re shopping at the top end, where a Transporter can claim to rival a family SUV for comfort and spec. On paper at least, the median sits just over a million, so this isn’t what anyone would call affordable. If you pack smart, the Commerce 2.0 TDI 8-speed auto is your mainstay — 21 of the listings, priced between R869,900 and R1,116,000, target fleet managers and shuttle services who need something that doesn’t feel like a minibus taxi. Average mileage is a mere 44,917 km, which is suspiciously low for a commercial hauler — a sign these often live softer lives, probably as airport shuttles or executive movers, not battered by daily logistics runs. The posh 4MOTION Kombi Style at R1,526,510 is basically luxury-bus territory. Buyers who consider the Transporter over a HiAce do so for the slick DSG experience and cabin quality — tactile plastics, actual sound insulation, physical buttons where they matter. New stock edges out used by a hair, which says a lot about confidence in shifting vans at this price point in South Africa right now. For buyers who want an upmarket van that doesn’t feel like a compromise, the Transporter is what the segment should have been from the start.
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
2020 Volkswagen Transporter
Est. monthly payment:
R 0 p/m
Vredelust, Cape Town, Western Cape
Volkswagen Transporter FAQs
Common questions about the Volkswagen Transporter in South Africa.
