EV in Pretoria
One Pretoria team for the whole EV journey. We help you decide whether an EV makes sense for your daily drive, point you at the right Menlyn or Hatfield dealer when you're ready, install a charger before the car arrives, then service, repair and source spares for the life of the vehicle. WhatsApp us your question — straight answer, no commission.
The four things you're worried about
The honest answers, with Pretoria numbers
Most Pretorians asking about EVs have the same four worries. Here's the honest version, with City of Tshwane numbers — not brochure talk. If your answer still feels uncertain after reading these, send us one WhatsApp and we'll run your specific situation.
“I'll get stranded.”
You won't.
Most Pretoria commutes — Hatfield to Centurion, Brooklyn to Menlyn, Lynnwood into the city — are well under 100 km a day. Every EV sold in SA does 300 km+ on a charge. You'll plug in at home overnight and forget petrol stations exist. Tell us your daily drive and we'll show you how much range you'd have spare.
“Load-shedding will leave me unable to charge.”
This is where it gets good.
Pair your EV with solar and you literally make your own fuel — drive on sunshine, ignore the grid and the petrol price. Pretoria sits on the same Highveld irradiation as Joburg, so solar pays back fast. We design every install to keep you charging when the lights go out.
“It's too expensive.”
The sticker scares people; the maths doesn't.
EVs run at about R0.66/km on the City of Tshwane Block 1 tariff (R2.98/kWh) vs R2.40 for petrol. New-EV prices fell 16% in two years (median R790k) and the cheapest sub-R350k BEV is now R339,900. We'll run your real numbers — even if the answer is "wait six months."
“There's nowhere to charge.”
80% of charging happens at home.
Plug in overnight, wake up to a full battery. We install that — fixed price, COC, body-corp paperwork if you're sectional title (and Brooklyn, Lynnwood and Centurion are full of it). For the other 20% there's a live map of every working public charger in the metro — Menlyn Park, Mall of Africa Centurion, Brooklyn Mall, Hatfield Plaza.
And one more thing.
Make your own fuel.
In a country scarred by load-shedding and fuel-price shocks, the real win isn't "green" — it's never being held hostage by Eskom or the petrol price again. Pair your EV with rooftop solar and a battery, and your driving runs on free Highveld sunshine.
See the solar + EV calculator →From R339,900
The cheapest way into an EV in Pretoria
The BYD Dolphin Surf does the Hatfield-to-Centurion commute on small change and charges overnight at home. We'll tell you honestly if it fits your drive.
See sub-R350k options →Buy in Pretoria
EVs Pretorians are buying
Real prices, real range. We line up dealer offers and book your test drive — no commission, no pressure.
EV in Pretoria
Everything we do for Pretoria EV owners
Six things, one team. Click through to the specific service you need.
Home charger installation
Fixed-price 7.4 / 11 / 22 kW home charger installs across Pretoria + Centurion. COC included.
Get an install quote →Authorised service
Service centres by brand, intervals, ballpark costs. Book a Menlyn / Hatfield / Centurion slot.
Book a service →EV repair & emergency
Home charger fault, dead 12V, won't-charge issues — 24-hour Pretoria response.
Get emergency help →EV spares & parts
Type 2 cables, tyres, 12V batteries, body panels. Tell us what you need, we source it.
Find a part →Buy an EV in Pretoria
Dealer directory by brand + test drive booking + finance + insurance discounts.
Compare EVs →Public charging map
Every working public charger in the metro — Menlyn Park, Mall of Africa Centurion, Brooklyn Mall, Hatfield.
View the map →Pretoria by the numbers
Pretoria is the easiest switch in SA
Pretoria sits on a friendly EV maths set — Tshwane's prepaid tariff is cheaper than the Cape, the dealer corridor between Menlyn and Centurion is dense, and the Highveld irradiation makes solar+EV payback short.
Home charging in Pretoria
Wake up full. Every morning.
Eight out of ten EV charges happen at home. Plug in when you park, charge overnight on the City of Tshwane prepaid tariff, and skip the petrol queue for good — even through load-shedding.
- ~R0.66/km charging overnight on City of Tshwane Block 1 (R2.98/kWh).
- Pair with rooftop solar — Highveld irradiation gives Pretoria a 6–8 year payback.
- Sectional title? We handle the body-corporate motivation at no charge.
- 7 kW wall unit, SWA cable, COC + 12-month aftercare included.
From the EV community
What South African EV drivers are saying
Real public posts from South African EV discussion threads — quoted verbatim with the original author handle, post date, and a link to the source thread. No edits, no anonymisation.
Came from an X3m40i. The tech in this car is far superior, pull off is super quick, not like the BM but it does weigh about 2.2 tons. For 800k vs the replacement of the BMW for about 1.8 mill, well it's expected. I must have replaced about 15 tyres in 3 years with the BM, at about 7k a tyre, do the maths. These cars are not designed for our roads. And the petrol? Was probably putting in R500 every 3 or 4 days.
We need to develop proper recharge etiquette in this country. Public charging should be limited to 80% — the next 20% is very slow and inefficient. Also user education needs to be pushed. PHEV really should only be bought if you can recharge at home or the office, where tariffs are cheapest. Charging at public fast chargers is so not the intention or use case of these vehicles.
I blame the charge operators. In real countries they charge you for blocking etc. — no need for user education, just hit them where it hurts; they learn quickly that way. To the ICE users blocking chargers, you need a real country to fix that with fines/impounding from the city, like parking in a disabled spot when you're not disabled.
Posts are quoted as written; usernames are public forum handles. We do not vouch for or amend any claim — these are the SA EV community speaking for themselves.
Why Pretoria is different
A Pretoria install isn't a JHB install
A Pretoria EV install isn't the same as one in Cape Town or Joburg. Tariffs, climate, sectional-title prevalence, dealer density — all city-specific.
Menlyn + Centurion + Hatfield dealer corridor
BB BYD Hatfield + Centurion, CMH Volvo Menlyn, BMW Menlyn, Leo Haese Hatfield, Mercedes Menlyn + Centurion, Audi Menlyn + Centurion, MG Menlyn, Geely Hatfield — comparable options within a 15-km arc.
East-suburbs sectional title
Brooklyn, Lynnwood, Faerie Glen and Centurion are heavy on sectional title and security estates. We draft the body-corporate motivation at no extra cost and handle the trustees-meeting cadence.
Tshwane prepaid favours night charging
City of Tshwane Block 1 (R2.98/kWh) makes overnight charging especially cheap. Combined with Highveld irradiation, solar+EV math here is competitive on a 6–8 year payback.
Home charger installation
A charger fitted before your car even arrives
Send four photos of your DB board and parking spot. Fixed-price quote in 24 hours — 7 kW wall unit, SWA cable, Certificate of Compliance and 12 months aftercare, all in.
From the Knowledge Hub
Pretoria EV guides
Written by owners, with local numbers — the deep detail that doesn't fit on this page.
Charging
Every public charger in Pretoria — live 2026 map
Menlyn Park, Mall of Africa Centurion, Brooklyn Mall, Hatfield and every working DC charger in the metro, with live status and prices.
Read the guide →Installation
What a home charger install really costs in Pretoria
The honest breakdown — wall unit, cable run, sectional-title paperwork, and why most Pretoria installs land between R13k and R15k.
Read the guide →Owning
Is an EV worth it in Pretoria? The real maths
Running costs on the City of Tshwane tariff, solar payback on the Highveld, and the trips an EV actually handles from the city.
Read the guide →Common questions
Things Pretoria owners ask
Ready?
Not sure yet? That's exactly why we're here.
Whatever step you're on — choosing, installing, servicing, repairing, sourcing parts — send us one WhatsApp with the question. We usually reply within the hour during business hours, the next morning if it's evening. No call-out fee, no spin, no commission.