3+ BYD Seal Cars for Sale in South Africa
View 3 currently available BYD Seal for sale in South Africa. Check detailed specifications, pricing, and dealer ratings before making your choice. The current price range for these listings is from R 954,900 to R 1,189,950. The average listed price is R 1,044,933.
625 new site-wide listings added in the last 7 days
Est. monthly payment:
R 24,413 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 24,413 p/m
Est. monthly payment:
R 20,310 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 20,310 p/m
Est. monthly payment:
R 19,591 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 19,591 p/m
Search Results for BYD Cars for Sale (New and Used)
BYD Vehicles
Find BYD Seal 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 3 cars for sale from dealers in South Africa. Browse new and used inventory with transparent dealer pricing.
BYD Seal
The BYD Seal lands in a segment that’s still waking up to the idea of mainstream EV sedans in South Africa, and its arrival couldn’t be more direct: four brand-new, 2026-spec models, zero used stock, no half-measures. Pricing? R979,900 to R1,189,900, which means you’re parking it right next to the Model 3, Volvo EX30, and BMW i4. That’s not a slipstream, it’s a head-on challenge. No petrol fallback here, no hybrid hedge—every Seal is fully electric, which is a gutsy move for a brand still earning its stripes locally. At a median R1,084,925, you’d be forgiven for expecting the sort of polish you get from the Germans or Swedes, because that’s who you’ll be cross-shopping, whether you admit it or not.
There’s a simple split: two Seal Premiums at the lower end (R979,900 to R989,950), two Seal Performances at the top (R1,179,900 to R1,189,900). That R200k jump isn’t just for bragging rights; on paper at least, you’re getting real extra punch, not just flashier bits. No used Seals means you’re buying blind on depreciation, so the early adopters are taking one for the team. Where the Seal claws back some ground over the Model 3 is with its physical controls and a cabin that feels more like a car and less like a tech experiment, which you’ll appreciate every time you hit a pothole on Jan Smuts or get stuck in Fourways traffic. The real tests will be charging speed and whether the range holds up once you’re out of the showroom bubble—because that’s the point, especially with load-shedding never far away.
