Volkswagen Amarok (2010-2023) Buyer’s Guide
The 1st-gen Volkswagen Amarok was on the South African market for more than a decade. What should you look out when shopping for a used example? Let’s take a closer look…
When the original Volkswagen Amarok touched down in South Africa in 2010, the Wolfsburg-based manufacturer’s local division billed it as the “world’s most fuel-efficient 1-tonne bakkie”, predicting that the 2.0 BiTDI powertrain would “revolutionise the segment”.
But, by the time the curtain fell on this generation some 13 years later, the Amarok would instead be remembered for the most powerful (and least efficient) engine in the line-up: the 3.0-litre V6 TDI.
Yes, for quite some time in Mzansi, the Amarok was the only bakkie in its class to be offered with a brawny 6-cylinder turbodiesel, lending VW’s 1-tonner a distinct unique selling point. And, when a V6-powered alternative finally did arrive in the form of the now discontinued Mercedes-Benz X350d, it proved to be a short-lived rivalry.
Of course, there’s more to the German firm’s 1st real stab at a 1-tonne bakkie (the Taro that preceded it by a couple of decades was just a rebadged 5th-gen Toyota Hilux, after all) than a single powertrain option, particularly since this engine was offered only after the facelift. In fact, at launch, Volkswagen described the ladder-frame Amarok as the “most technically advanced bakkie in South Africa”.
Designed by Walter de Silva – the man responsible for penning the Alfa Romeo 156, 1st-gen Audi A5 and R8 models, Volkswagen Up, and many more – the 1st-gen Amarok was an important model for Volkswagen in regions such as South America and Australasia, with South Africa likewise categorised as a “key market”. We’re going to focus on the double-cab body style here, since the 2-door version wasn’t particularly popular with local buyers (and even fell away entirely at the facelift).
Once the 2nd-generation model – based on the Ranger and built by Ford in South Africa – came online in early 2023, around 830 000 examples of the original Amarok had been sold globally, with more than 42 000 of those registered locally (around 29 000 in pre-facelift form). Fascinatingly, although production of the original Amarok has ceased for global markets, the 1st-gen shape will technically soldier on in Argentina as a prolonged-lifecycle model – or Amarok Vivo, if you will.