Guide
Pajero Dakar Rally History: 12 Wins
How the Mitsubishi Pajero became the most successful car in Dakar Rally history — 12 overall wins, 7 consecutive from 2001–2007, and the cars behind them.
No vehicle has dominated the Dakar Rally the way the Mitsubishi Pajero has. The Pajero Dakar history is one of the great runs in motorsport: 12 overall wins, including seven consecutive victories from 2001 to 2007 — a streak recognised by Guinness World Records as a benchmark of cross-country rally supremacy. This is the story of how a Japanese 4×4 became the most successful car in the toughest race on earth, and why that pedigree still matters when you buy one in South Africa.
The Dakar is not a track event. It is a multi-week, multi-thousand-kilometre marathon across desert, dune and mountain, where reliability counts as much as speed. That the Pajero won there twelve times tells you something fundamental about the engineering, and it is a thread that runs right through our Pajero Heritage & Motorsport coverage.
The record at a glance
The headline numbers are worth stating plainly, because they are the foundation of the Pajero’s reputation.
| Achievement | Detail |
|---|---|
| Overall wins | 12 — the most by any car in Dakar history |
| Consecutive wins | 7 in a row, from 2001 to 2007 |
| Recognition | A Guinness World Record for the achievement |
| Competition car | Pajero / Montero Evolution and its development lineage |
Twelve overall wins, seven of them consecutive between 2001 and 2007 — a Guinness World Record that no rival manufacturer has matched.
The Pajero and Montero Evolution in Dakar
The competition cars wore the Pajero name in most markets and the Montero name in others, but they were the same effort. Over the years the programme evolved from broadly production-based machines into the purpose-built Pajero/Montero Evolution: a silhouette racer engineered specifically for the marathon, with long-travel suspension, a tuned high-output engine and bodywork built to survive thousands of kilometres of punishment.
That development path is also why the road-going Pajero Evolution homologation special exists — it links the showroom to the rally car. The deeper you go into the Pajero’s motorsport story, the clearer it becomes that the race programme and the production vehicles fed each other for decades.
The drivers and the dominant era
The seven-in-a-row run from 2001 to 2007 was the peak. During that period Mitsubishi assembled a deep roster of elite cross-country drivers and a meticulously organised works team, and it was that combination — talent plus preparation plus a proven car — that delivered the streak. Rather than attribute specific wins to individuals from memory, the safe and accurate way to describe the era is this: a strong, multi-national driver line-up backed by one of the best-run factory operations the rally had seen.
What made the dominance so striking is that the Dakar regularly punishes favourites. To win it once is hard; to win it seven years running, against shifting routes and rising competition, is the achievement the Guinness record recognises.
Why the Pajero dominated
Several engineering and team strengths explain the run of success:
- Reliability first — the Dakar is won by finishing. The Pajero programme prioritised durability across thousands of brutal kilometres.
- Proven four-wheel-drive expertise — Mitsubishi’s long investment in 4WD, the same philosophy that produced Super Select on the road cars, translated directly to traction in sand and rock.
- Continuous development — each year’s car learned from the last, culminating in the purpose-built Evolution.
- Team organisation — disciplined logistics, servicing and strategy kept cars running when rivals broke.
Those same traits — robust four-wheel drive and a focus on going the distance — are exactly what South African owners value when they take a Pajero into the Kalahari or up a Lesotho pass. The race success was never a marketing accident; it reflected real engineering you can still feel in a used car today.
What the Dakar heritage means for SA buyers
Race pedigree is a reason to choose a Pajero, but it is not a substitute for due diligence on a 15- or 20-year-old vehicle. The toughness that won the Dakar only survives in a specific car if it has been looked after.
- Inspect any prospective purchase properly — our Used Pajero Buying Guide: The 20-Point Inspection walks you through it.
- Know the weak spots before you commit, generation by generation, with our guide to Pajero common problems.
- Tap into local knowledge and trip reports by choosing to join the SA Pajero community, where owners share real-world experience.
Buy a well-kept example and you own a small piece of the most successful car in Dakar history — and a 4×4 still genuinely capable of South Africa’s hardest terrain.
Frequently Asked Questions
How many Dakar Rally wins does the Pajero have?
What car did Mitsubishi use to win the Dakar?
Why was the Pajero so successful at Dakar?
Does Dakar heritage make a used Pajero a good buy in SA?
To dig deeper into the racing legacy, return to Pajero Heritage & Motorsport, and when you are ready to find a sound example, lean on the Used Pajero Buying Guide to make sure the car lives up to the badge.