SAPS released the latest quarterly crime stats covering January–March 2025 in May. 7,731 vehicle and motorcycle thefts in 90 days — roughly 85 per day, every day, somewhere in South Africa. That’s 22 minutes between each theft. King Price’s 2026 annualised projection sits at around 45,000 vehicles — a 3% decrease on 2024, but still the highest absolute number in the world per capita.

The headline number gets the press. The patterns inside it are what matter if you’re deciding whether to spend R7,499 on prevention. Here’s the full top 10, drawn from the latest SAPS data, Tracker SA’s Vehicle Crime Index, and Cartrack’s 2026 most-stolen report.

The top 10, ranked

01

Toyota Hilux

8 years at #1 · cross-border resale + farm market

#1 · 8 yr
02

VW Polo Vivo

SA’s most-stolen passenger car · fast metro turnover

Top 3
03

Ford Ranger

Wildtrak & Raptor trims most exposed (keyless)

Top 3
04

Toyota Fortuner

Hilux platform · same vulnerability profile

Top 5
05

Hyundai Grand i10

Volume city hatch · cheap parts market

Top 5
06

Nissan NP200

Workhorse half-ton · chassis & engine demand

Top 10
07

Isuzu D-Max

Diesel bakkie · cross-border demand

Top 10
08

Toyota Corolla · Quest

Sedan workhorse · e-hailing market

Top 10
09

Kia Picanto

Entry-level city car · high theft-to-fleet ratio

Top 10
10

BMW 3 Series

First premium German marque on the list · keyless trim exposure

Top 10

Sources: SAPS Q1 2025 crime stats; Cartrack ZA · Most stolen car this year in SA; Tracker SA · Vehicle crime in SA; King Price · Car theft statistics 2026.

Province by province

SAPS Q1 2025 broke down vehicle theft cases by province. Gauteng dominates, KZN and Western Cape follow:

If you live in Gauteng or Cape Town and drive any of the top 10 above, your individual annual theft risk is meaningfully higher than the national average suggests. The maths are dull but worth the 30 seconds: 4,096 Gauteng cases per quarter · ~16,400 per year · against a Gauteng passenger-vehicle pool of ~4 million · works out to roughly 1 in 240 vehicles per year, before adjusting for model.

Drive a Hilux in Centurion? Multiply that several times.

What the data actually tells you

Three patterns matter for your decision.

1 · The list barely changes year-on-year

The Hilux has been #1 every year since 2017. The Polo Vivo has been top 3 every year since 2018. Syndicates don’t rotate. They buy stock lists from chop shops, fence networks, and cross-border buyers. The list reflects long-term demand, not opportunity.

What this means: if your car is on the list today, it’ll be on the list in 2027 too. The exposure compounds for the life of the vehicle.

2 · Recovery rate ≠ you keep your car

The 65% national recovery rate is the headline insurers like. The reality:

Recovery is necessary — for the case where prevention fails, or where a flatbed-tow takes the car. But it isn’t the same thing as keeping your car.

3 · Keyless trim levels are over-represented

Look at the Ranger entry on the list above. SAPS doesn’t break it down by trim — but Tracker SA’s 2025 report does, and the pattern is consistent across marques: keyless-entry trim levels are stolen at a meaningfully higher rate than the same model fitted with a traditional key blade.

This isn’t a fluke. It’s the relay attack at scale — the attack vector that doesn’t exist on a mechanical key.

The top 10 stolen list is a list of cars your factory immobiliser was designed to protect — in 1995, against a 1995 attack. The attack changed. The immobiliser didn’t.

What this means for your insurance premium

Insurers tier comprehensive cover by:

The honest position: an aftermarket immobiliser will not (yet) move your premium in a way the insurer publishes. What it does is move your probability of needing to claim — which over a 5-year ownership window is the more meaningful number.

If your car is on the list

Three reads on the data:

  1. You’re not unlucky. The top 10 represents about 38% of all SA vehicle thefts. If you bought any of these models, you bought into the syndicate market — not a personal exposure.
  2. Recovery is a backstop, not a strategy. A tracker matters when prevention fails — flatbed, perfect insider job, etc. It is not the first layer.
  3. The cheap fixes don’t scale. Faraday pouches work for two weeks, then nobody uses them. Steering locks deter opportunists, not syndicates. The honest first layer is the one that works while you sleep, without you remembering to do anything.

All 10 covered

Every car on this list is on the carGuardian fitment list · compatible with the most stolen vehicles in South Africa

Check your specific make + year in 30 seconds. R7,499 once-off fitted. No monthly subscription.

Sources