4+ BMW M3 Cars for Sale in South Africa
Search 4 listings of BMW M3 for sale in South Africa. Filter by year, mileage, and price to find your ideal car. Verified local sellers ensure transparent pricing and trustworthy deals. The current price range for these listings is from R 799,900 to R 1,188,888. The average listed price is R 922,147. Mileage varies between 78,150 km and 267,721 km.
625 new site-wide listings added in the last 7 days
Est. monthly payment:
R 17,436 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 17,436 p/m
Est. monthly payment:
R 16,411 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 16,411 p/m
Est. monthly payment:
R 17,436 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 17,436 p/m
Braamfontein, Johannesburg, Gauteng
Est. monthly payment:
R 24,391 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 24,391 p/m
Pretoria Central, Pretoria, Gauteng
Search Results for BMW Cars for Sale (New and Used)
BMW Vehicles
Find BMW M3 for sale with transparent cash price information and flexible payment options in South Africa. Access deals near me, compare finance deals, and schedule test drives at local dealerships — all designed to help you secure the best deal.
Available Inventory
Discover 4 cars for sale from dealers in South Africa. Browse new and used inventory with transparent dealer pricing.
BMW M3
BMW’s M3 coupe isn’t your average used-car lot hero. We’re talking about a cult icon that lives in the heartland of South African petrolhead dreams: proper enthusiast territory, not just for anyone looking for a fast badge. You’ll only find two examples for sale right now in the whole country—good luck window-shopping. Prices? R849,900 to R1,188,888, which lobs it straight into the firing line of used Porsche Caymans and a few older 911s. Badge snobs may flinch, but on paper at least, the E46-generation M3—built between 1994 and 2011—still sparks debates about what the last truly analogue M car was. You get petrol power, a choice of manual or the sharper, more divisive M-DCT gearbox, but either way, it’s old-school and unapologetic.
Mileage averages out to 176,611 km, which might make hot-hatch shoppers blink, but that’s missing the point. The S54 straight-six in the E46 was engineered for long-haul abuse, and these cars were made to be driven, not polished. If you’re eyeing the R849,900 unit, you’re buying that legendary engine paired with a manual box—the purist’s pick. The pricier R1,188,888 example offers the M-DCT, which some love for its snap but others will say lacks soul. South Africans considering these M3s know exactly what they’re after: raw feedback, the wail of a straight-six, and a cockpit that’s all physical controls, not digital facelifts. No OTA updates here—what you get is what it should have been from the start. And that’s the point.
