Porsche Cayenne: future value & depreciation
A Porsche Cayenne (suv, on sale 2003–2026) sits in the Premium / Luxury depreciation tier. Here is how a typical example bought new at around R 1 900 000 is projected to hold its value.
- Est. monthly*
- R 33 209
- Value in 3 years
- R 1 163 712
- Value retained
- 61%
*10% deposit · 72 months · ~11.75% p.a. Estimate only.
| After | Projected value | Value retained |
|---|---|---|
| New | R 1 900 000 | 100% |
| 1 year | R 1 520 000 | 80% |
| 2 years | R 1 322 400 | 70% |
| 3 years | R 1 163 712 | 61% |
| 4 years | R 1 047 341 | 55% |
| 5 years | R 953 080 | 50% |
Is the Porsche Cayenne a good buy?
Whether it’s a smart purchase comes down to what you pay, how you finance it, and how well it holds value. In the Premium / Luxury tier, the Cayenne is projected to keep about 61% of its value after three years — the point where many owners look to trade or settle. A bigger deposit and a small (or no) balloon keep you in positive equity sooner. Model your own deal in the equity calculator.
Frequently asked questions
How much will a Porsche Cayenne be worth in 5 years?
Starting from a typical new price of about R 1 900 000, a Porsche Cayenne is projected to be worth roughly R 953 080 after 5 years — about 50% of its value. This is an estimate based on Porsche's Premium / Luxury depreciation profile and the suv body type.
Does the Porsche Cayenne hold its value well?
It sits in our "Premium / Luxury" tier. Bakkies and SUVs from strong brands tend to hold value better in South Africa, while EVs and luxury models depreciate faster. Use the calculator to see equity against your own deposit, term and balloon.
How is this future value estimated?
We apply a make-and-body depreciation curve to a representative new price. Real resale prices vary with condition, mileage, spec and the market — treat these as estimates, not a quote.
Estimates only — not financial advice. Figures use representative pricing and generalised depreciation; verify with a registered dealer or finance provider.