VW Tera

Fascinatingly, we’ve since discovered that in September 2024, VW’s application to trademark the “Tera” moniker in South Africa was provisionally refused for being “open to objection” as “confusingly similar” to Nissan’s “Terra” badge (a ladder-frame SUV that was on sale in Mzansi for only a short period).
 
VW’s new small SUV to be called ‘Tengo’ in SA

Volkswagen Group Africa has announced that its upcoming small SUV – which will be built at the Kariega plant – will be called the “Tengo” in South Africa…

South Africa, get ready to welcome the new Volkswagen Tengo – well, in 2027, anyway. VW Group Africa has announced that its upcoming small SUV – which will be manufactured at the Kariega facility in the Eastern Cape – will be badged as the “Tengo” in Mzansi.

The news comes via VW’s social-media pages, where it earlier ran a poll asking the public to decide on the local badge of the so-called “A0 Entry SUV” that is known in Brazil as the Tera. After just 10 or so days of voting, the results are in.

Based on the German firm’s announcement, “Tengo” received the most votes from South Africans, finishing ahead of the other 3 provided options – Tavi, Tiva and Tion. For the record, VW says the word “Tengo” has “rich cultural significance in African languages” and describes qualities “like strength, resilience and purpose”.

As a reminder, VW’s Brazilian arm led the design and development of this new model, and has already started producing it at its Taubaté factory. The wraps officially came off the Tera in March 2025, before the vehicle hit that market at the start of June.

In Brazil, the Tera is available with either a naturally aspirated 1.0-litre petrol (MPI) engine or a turbocharged 1.0-litre petrol (TSI) motor. Transmission options in that country include a 5-speed manual gearbox and a 6-speed automatic cog-swapper.

What about the South African version? Well, though VW has started upgrading its Kariega facility to accommodate production of the newcomer alongside the Polo hatch and Polo Vivo, the Tengo is scheduled to go on sale locally only in 2027. This comes after the R4-billion investment in the facility announced back in April 2024.


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Say Hello to Tengo – Volkswagen’s Next Kariega-Made Model

Volkswagen is ready to roll with its new MQB A0 Entry SUV on the African continent, and it won’t share the Tera nameplate from South America, but will be called the Tengo instead.

Volkswagen has confirmed Tengo as the official name of its upcoming locally built SUV, set to roll off the production line at the Kariega plant in the Eastern Cape from 2026, with sales expected to begin in 2027.

Previously referred to as the Tera, or more formally the “MQB A0 Entry SUV”, the newcomer will become Volkswagen South Africa’s third locally produced model alongside the Polo and Polo Vivo. It emerges from a R4-billion investment in the Kariega facility, part of a broader global project involving Skoda India and Volkswagen do Brasil, with South Africa leading the development.

The name Tengo was selected through a public vote, beating out Tavi, Tiva, and Tion. While VW hasn’t disclosed how many votes were cast, the brand says the chosen name “carries rich cultural significance in African language” and reflects attributes such as strength, resilience, and purpose.

Expected to replace the T-Cross in VW’s local SUV line-up as the brand’s smallest high-rider, the Tengo will ride on the same MQB A0 platform as the Polo and Vivo, and will reportedly be powered exclusively by the 1.0 TSI engine.

Although full details remain under wraps, the Tengo is likely to differ inside and out from the Brazilian-spec Tera, though early insights could be revealed at VW’s annual Product Indaba in 2026 — either via a pre-production prototype or a display unit of its international counterpart.

 
Pricing will be key here for VW. Best seller in the works and a highly competitive mini suv segment.
 
Volkswagen shifts gears: Africa's automotive future revs up as Touareg exits and Tengo enters

Volkswagen is reshaping its global product and production strategy, and Africa is set to play an increasingly important role.

While the flagship Touareg will be sold until 2027, the company is preparing for the launch of the new Tengo, which will be built in South Africa from 2027.

The Tengo will be closely based on the Brazilian-developed VW Tera, and the subcompact crossover will slot in below the VW T-Cross.

End of the line for Touareg

According to Martina Biene, Chairperson and Managing Director of Volkswagen Group Africa (VWGA), the Touareg’s demise has less to do with electrification and more to do with economics.

“The Touareg was the only car on its platform,” she explained. “Unlike the MQB27 platform, which underpins models such as the Polo and T-Cross, or the MQB37, which carries the Golf, Tayron and Tiguan, the Touareg shares its architecture only with the Porsche Cayenne. Maintaining an extra platform and electronic architecture for such low volumes was simply too costly.”

The facelifted Touareg that reached the market came at a significant investment, but with low sales and rising CO₂ penalties in Europe, it could not be justified.

Export volumes of smaller models such as the Polo built at the Kariega plant and also the sole global manufacturer of the Polo GTI, are expected to decline as European emissions targets tighten, adding pressure on VWGA to develop new markets.

Project Tengo

This is where the Tengo comes in.

Earlier this year, VWGA’s Kariega plant closed for four weeks for installations and upgrades, including new robots in the body shop. Press tools have already arrived from Brazil and China, and the first test bodies are due by the end of 2025. Pre-series production is scheduled for early 2026, with full market launch in 2027.

Engines for the Tengo will be sourced from Brazil. “For Africa, we still need engines that can cope with lower-quality fuel,” Biene said. These so-called “bad fuel” engines - built to EU3 standards without catalytic converters or petrol particulate filters - remain necessary in regions where fuel standards lag behind Europe.

 
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