2+ Opel Grandland Cars for Sale in South Africa
Browse 2 available Opel Grandland for sale in South Africa. Compare specifications, pricing, and options from trusted dealers. The current price range for these listings is from R 199,900 to R 299,990. The average listed price is R 249,945. Mileage varies between 47,834 km and 162,339 km.
625 new site-wide listings added in the last 7 days
Est. monthly payment:
R 4,101 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 4,101 p/m
Alan Manor, Johannesburg, Gauteng
Est. monthly payment:
R 6,154 p/m
Est. monthly payment: R 6,154 p/m
Hessequa Ward 2, Albertinia, Western Cape
Search Results for Opel Cars for Sale (New and Used)
Opel Vehicles
Explore Opel Grandland for sale with competitive finance deals and flexible monthly instalments in South Africa. Compare prices, book test drive appointments, and find deals near me — all designed to help you secure the right car at the best price.
Available Inventory
Browse 2 cars for sale in South Africa from verified dealers. Compare specs, pricing, and features — new and used vehicles across every budget and body type.
Opel Grandland
Opel’s Grandland returns to South African showrooms with a single-minded approach: one model, one price, and a clear shot at the established German and Japanese crowd. R589,900 buys you the 2025 GS Line 1.6T AT, which means you get the sportier styling and a turbocharged 1.6-litre petrol under the bonnet, paired with a semi-automatic gearbox. The target is obvious—VW Tiguan money, Mazda CX-5 and Toyota RAV4 territory—but Opel’s not pretending to chase sales volume here. With just one listing and no pre-owned bargains floating about, this is a reset for the Grandland nameplate in Mzansi, and that matters if you care about standing out from the Tiguan and RAV4-driving neighbours in your townhouse complex.
Opel’s decision to skip the entry-level spec and go straight for the GS Line is smart—on paper at least. Local buyers in this price band want value, but they also want to feel like they’re getting something a bit special for their money. The GS Line’s visual punch and badge cachet go some way to justifying its sticker, especially since a similarly kitted Tiguan will cost you even more. You won’t find used stock yet, so if you’re keen, you’ll have to pay full whack, but that’s the point—Opel’s banking on fresh metal and a bolder look to lure buyers who might have overlooked the brand in years past. Whether the Grandland offers enough kit and genuine substance to tempt buyers away from the segment heavyweights is the real question, especially for South Africans who’ve watched Opel’s local fortunes swing wildly over the last decade.
