Why high diesel prices can reduce trade-in values

Over the long run, consistently high diesel prices can negatively affect the trade-in value of diesel-powered passenger cars, but the impact depends heavily on the vehicle type, market trends, and buyer demand in places like South Africa.

Here’s how it usually plays out:

Why high diesel prices can reduce trade-in values

1. Buyers start avoiding diesel cars

When diesel becomes significantly more expensive than petrol, many used-car buyers:

  • calculate higher monthly running costs,
  • compare fuel savings versus maintenance costs,
  • and often shift toward petrol, hybrid, or smaller turbo-petrol vehicles.

Lower demand usually means:

  • dealers offer lower trade-in prices,
  • vehicles stay longer on showroom floors,
  • resale values soften over time.

2. Diesel’s traditional advantage becomes weaker

Diesel vehicles were historically popular because they offered:

  • excellent fuel economy,
  • long-distance efficiency,
  • strong towing ability.

But modern petrol engines and hybrids have improved dramatically. If diesel no longer provides a major cost advantage at the pump, many buyers ask:

“Why take the extra maintenance risk?”

That affects long-term desirability.


3. Maintenance concerns also influence value

Older diesel vehicles can become expensive to maintain because of:

  • turbochargers,
  • injectors,
  • diesel particulate filters (DPFs),
  • high-pressure fuel systems.

When fuel is expensive and maintenance is costly, second-hand buyers become more cautious — especially once vehicles are out of warranty.


But diesel vehicles won’t all lose value equally

Some diesel vehicles tend to hold value surprisingly well despite fuel prices:

Diesel bakkies and SUVs

Vehicles used for:

  • towing,
  • farming,
  • construction,
  • long-distance travel,
  • fleet work

often retain strong demand.

Examples include models from:

  • Toyota Hilux,
  • Ford Ranger,
  • Isuzu D-Max.

In South Africa, diesel double cabs are deeply established in the market and may depreciate slower than diesel sedans or hatchbacks.


Long-distance drivers may still prefer diesel

If someone drives:

  • 25,000–40,000 km per year,
  • frequently travels between cities,
  • or tows trailers/caravans,

diesel can still make financial sense because of lower consumption and torque.

That helps maintain some resale demand.


What may happen over the next 5–10 years

Passenger diesel cars

Likely trends:

  • softer resale values,
  • reduced buyer pool,
  • faster depreciation compared with hybrids or efficient petrol cars.

Diesel SUVs and bakkies

Likely trends:

  • demand remains relatively stable,
  • but values may flatten if diesel prices stay extremely high.

Hybrids and efficient petrol vehicles

Vehicles from companies like:

  • Toyota,
  • Suzuki,
  • Honda

could gain stronger resale value if fuel costs remain elevated.


In South Africa specifically

The effect may be slower than in Europe because:

  • EV adoption is still limited,
  • diesel bakkies dominate many industries,
  • long-distance travel is common,
  • towing and utility use remain important.

So diesel is unlikely to “collapse” in value soon — especially for commercial-oriented vehicles.

But for ordinary diesel sedans and family cars, high diesel prices can definitely weaken trade-in values over time.

Posted in General.