Pajero Gen 3 (1999–2006): Buyer’s Guide

1999 – 2006 Italian Design.
Serious Off-Road.

Styled by Pininfarina, engineered by Mitsubishi. The Gen 3 transformed what a Pajero could be — 300% more torsionally rigid, independent rear suspension, and the formidable 3.2L Di-D common-rail diesel. The most technologically refined Pajero before the final Gen 4.

A Ground-Up Reinvention

When Mitsubishi launched the Gen 3 in 1999, they didn’t just update the Pajero — they reinvented it. The new platform moved to a unibody-with-subframe construction, replacing the traditional body-on-frame design of the Gen 1 and Gen 2. Critics raised their eyebrows. Off-road purists worried. Then people drove it.

The new architecture delivered a vehicle that was dramatically stiffer, significantly lighter, and radically more refined on the road — while losing minimal off-road capability. The Super Select II 4WD system retained all-mode capability, the approach and departure angles remained serious, and the 3.2 Di-D diesel was a revelation: 370 Nm of torque, common-rail precision, and genuine fuel efficiency for a vehicle this capable.

For South African buyers today, the Gen 3 represents a sweet spot: old enough to have depreciated significantly from new-car pricing, young enough that parts availability is still strong, and capable enough to tackle any SA trail from the Kgalagadi to the Sani Pass.

Gen 3 Innovations Over Gen 2

Gen 3 Engine Guide

The 3.2 Di-D is the unambiguous recommendation for SA buyers — torque, economy, and performance combined. The V6 petrol variants are smooth but expensive to run in SA fuel conditions.

CodeEnginePowerTorqueNotesVerdict
4M413.2L Di-D Common-Rail Diesel121 kW370 NmThe one to buy. Smooth, torquey, economical relative to engine size. Watch timing chain guide at 120k km service. Injectors wear at high mileage. Avoid excessive short trips.Best Buy
6G743.5L V6 MIVEC Petrol147 kW275 NmRefined and smooth but 13–17 L/100km is punishing in SA. Available in 24-valve form. Cooling system maintenance critical. Good option if diesel fuel quality is a concern.Good Option
6G753.8L V6 Petrol (from 2003)184 kW329 NmThe most powerful Gen 3. Excellent highway performance. Available in Exceed trim. High fuel consumption limits bush usefulness. Same cooling system vulnerabilities as 3.5 V6.For Highways

The Gen 3 3.2 Di-D uses a timing chain — not a belt (no replacement schedule in the traditional sense). However, the top timing chain guide is known to wear and should be inspected at or before 120,000 km. Cost to check: R800–R1,200. Cost to ignore: an engine rebuild. Ask for documented evidence this was checked on any Gen 3 Di-D over 100,000 km.

Complete Gen 3 Specs

Production1999–2006 Japan; ~2002–2007 export
PlatformUnibody with front & rear subframes
Front suspensionIndependent double wishbone, coil springs
Rear suspensionIndependent multi-link, coil springs (IRS)
SWB wheelbase2,545 mm
LWB wheelbase2,780 mm
Ground clearance205 mm
Approach angle (SWB)44°
Departure angle (LWB)26°
Wading depth500 mm
4WD systemSuper Select II — 2H/4H/4H-Lock/4L
Transmission5-speed manual / 5-speed automatic
Seating5 (SWB) / 5 or 7 (LWB)
Fuel tank (LWB)88 L
Towing capacity3,100 kg (braked)
AirbagsUp to 6 SRS
SA entry price (2026)R80,000–R200,000
Chassis stiffness300% more than Gen 2

Known Issues & What to Inspect

What to Pay

The Gen 3 Pajero is arguably the most underrated vehicle in the entire SA used 4×4 market. It looks dramatic (Pininfarina doesn’t design ugly vehicles), it’s equipped with the best diesel engine of its era, and it handles roads the Gen 2 would refuse to enjoy. A well-maintained 3.2 Di-D LWB with verified timing chain history is one of the best used 4×4 buys in South Africa at any price point. The IRS does marginally reduce extreme articulation versus the Gen 2 — but for 99% of SA trails, the difference is irrelevant. Buy the cleanest example you can find, check the timing guide history, and enjoy a vehicle that Pininfarina designed for the ages.

Gen 3 Resources