The most collectible Pajeros are the ones built for a purpose beyond the showroom. Across four decades Mitsubishi released a string of Pajero special editions — homologation specials born from Dakar, expedition-themed trims and limited runs that have since become quiet icons. If you are chasing a Pajero Evolution special edition or simply want to understand what makes one trim more desirable than another, this guide walks through the cars that matter and the honest reasons collectors seek them out.
We will be straight about where the facts are firm and where they are general. Exact production numbers for many of these editions were never widely published, so we avoid inventing figures. For the broader model context, our Pajero Generations: The Complete Guide sets the scene.
The Pajero Evolution: a Dakar homologation special
The standout among collectible Pajeros is the Pajero Evolution, launched in the late 1990s as a road-going homologation model. Its purpose was simple: to satisfy the rules of cross-country rally competition, a manufacturer must sell a related vehicle to the public. The Evolution was that vehicle — a short-wheelbase Pajero with a more aggressive bodykit, uprated suspension and a high-output petrol V6, created so Mitsubishi’s Dakar programme could run a closely related machine.
That motorsport link is exactly why the Evolution carries weight today. It is the clearest production expression of the rally heritage we cover in depth elsewhere, and it sits at the desirable end of any collector’s list. It is also, by nature, a limited model — but rather than quote a precise build figure we cannot verify, treat it as genuinely rare and price it on condition and provenance.
A homologation special exists because the rulebook demands a road car. That single fact is what turns the Pajero Evolution from a trim level into a piece of motorsport history.
Field Master, Exceed and expedition trims
Beyond the Evolution, Mitsubishi offered a range of better-equipped and expedition-flavoured trims over the years. Names and availability varied by market, so what reached South Africa, Japan, Europe and Australia did not always line up. Commonly referenced examples include:
- Field Master — an expedition-oriented trim that typically bundled protective and off-road equipment for buyers who actually went bush.
- Exceed — a higher-specification flagship trim emphasising comfort, leather and convenience features.
- Dakar-themed editions — appearance-led special editions that borrowed graphics, badging and colours from the rally programme, usually on otherwise standard mechanicals.
- Anniversary and run-out editions — limited trims released to mark milestones or close out a generation, often with unique paint or equipment bundles.
The important distinction for a buyer is between a mechanically special model like the Evolution and an appearance package that adds badges and graphics to a standard car. Both can be desirable, but they are not the same thing, and they should not command the same money.
What makes a Pajero collectible?
Collectibility comes down to a handful of repeatable factors. Use this as a checklist when you assess any special-edition listing:
| Factor | Why it matters | What to look for |
|---|---|---|
| Genuine rarity | Limited production lifts long-term desirability | Homologation models and short-run trims over cosmetic packages |
| Motorsport link | A direct competition connection adds story and value | The Pajero Evolution’s Dakar homologation role |
| Originality | Unmodified special editions are scarcer over time | Original trim, paint, badging and interior |
| Condition & provenance | Drives price far more than the badge alone | Service history, rust-free body, documented ownership |
In the South African market, condition and rust-freedom carry extra weight because coastal humidity and hard off-road use take their toll. A clean, honest standard Pajero often makes a better buy than a tired special edition wearing the right badges.
Where the specials sit across the generations
Special editions appeared throughout the model’s life, so the generation you are shopping shapes what is realistically available.
- Early collectible appeal is strongest in the first cars — see our Pajero Gen 1 buyer’s guide for what survives today.
- The Evolution and the rally-themed trims belong to the era covered in our Pajero Gen 2 buyer’s guide.
- Higher-spec flagship trims like Exceed feature heavily in our Pajero Gen 3 buyer’s guide and Pajero Gen 4 buyer’s guide.
- If you want similar capability without chasing a rare badge, the Pajero Sport review is a sensible alternative.
Body style also affects desirability: many of the sportier specials, including the Evolution, were short-wheelbase cars. If you are unsure whether SWB suits you, our Pajero SWB vs LWB guide compares the two directly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Pajero Evolution special edition?
How many Pajero Evolution units were built?
Is a Dakar edition the same as a homologation model?
Are special-edition Pajeros a good buy in South Africa?
To place these rare trims in the wider model story, return to Pajero Generations: The Complete Guide, and if a collectible badge isn’t essential, weigh the everyday value of the Pajero Sport before you buy.