Shorter. Lighter. More aggressive off-road angles. The SWB Pajero is the cult choice — rarer, more capable on technical terrain, and increasingly collectible. If the trail matters more than the cargo, this is your Pajero.
More seats. More cargo. More versatility for the SA lifestyle. The LWB is the family overlander — capable enough for serious trails, practical enough for school runs, spacious enough for a week-long Kgalagadi trip. The most common Pajero in South Africa for good reason.
Off-Road Geometry SWB wins
- 44° approach angle — climbs steeper obstacles without the front bumper catching
- 34° departure angle — clears ledges and drops cleanly without rear catching
- Superior breakover angle — crests rocky ridges without chassis contact
- Shorter turning circle — navigates tight bush tracks and reversals more easily
- ~150 kg lighter (gen dependent) — less momentum needed on climbs, less recovery effort when stuck
- Still genuinely capable — 37° approach is excellent for most SA trails including Kgalagadi, Kruger and Drakensberg routes
- Longer wheelbase = more stability at speed on corrugated gravel roads — the LWB is calmer at 120 km/h on dirt
- Better in loose sand — longer wheelbase helps float over soft surfaces rather than digging in
- Sufficient for 99% of SA trails — the departure angle limitation only becomes critical on extreme technical rock crawling
Practicality & Comfort LWB wins
- Easier to park in urban SA environments — shorter overall length matters in tight parking garages
- Lower entry cost — SWBs are less common but often priced at or below equivalent LWBs
- Solo and dual-use — ideal for one or two people who prioritise trail capability over load capacity
- Third-row seating available in Gen 2 (from 1996), Gen 3 and Gen 4 — genuine 7-seat family vehicle
- Rear cargo area with all seats down is large enough for a proper overland camp setup — drawer systems, fridges, water tanks
- Better resale liquidity — far more LWBs in SA means easier sale and better reference pricing when buying
- 90L fuel tank (LWB Gen 2+) — extends range significantly on remote routes where fuel stops are scarce
Use Cases & Owner Profiles Depends on you
SWB vs LWB — Full Spec Table
| Specification | SWB — Short Wheelbase | LWB — Long Wheelbase |
|---|---|---|
| Dimensions | ||
| Doors | 3 | 5 |
| Wheelbase (Gen 1) | 2,350 mm | 2,695 mm |
| Wheelbase (Gen 2) | 2,420 mm | 2,725 mm |
| Wheelbase (Gen 3/4) | 2,545 mm | 2,780 mm |
| Overall length (Gen 2) | ~4,350 mm | ~4,720 mm |
| Kerb weight (approx.) | ~1,800 kg | ~1,960 kg |
| Off-Road Geometry | ||
| Approach angle | 44° — Wins | 37° |
| Departure angle | 34° — Wins | 26° |
| Breakover angle | ~27° — Wins | ~19° |
| Ground clearance | 205 mm | 205 mm |
| Wading depth | 600 mm | 600 mm |
| Turning circle | ~10.8 m — Wins | ~12.2 m |
| Practicality | ||
| Seating capacity | 4–5 | 5–7 — Wins |
| Boot volume (seats up) | ~400 L | ~700 L — Wins |
| Boot volume (seats flat) | ~1,100 L | ~1,900 L — Wins |
| Fuel tank capacity | 65–75 L | 80–90 L — Wins |
| Est. range (2.8TD diesel) | ~600–650 km | ~720–800 km — Wins |
| Third-row seating | No | Yes (Gen 2+ from 1996) |
| Child seat access | Difficult (3-door) | Easy (5-door) |
| Dynamics & Driving | ||
| On-road stability (high speed) | Good | Better — longer WB |
| Corrugated road comfort | Good | Better — smoother |
| Urban manoeuvrability | Better — shorter | Good |
| Technical trail agility | Superior | Good |
| Ownership (South Africa) | ||
| SA market availability | Scarce — especially blister fender | Common — easy to find |
| Parts pricing reference | Harder to price-check | More reference data |
| Entry price (Gen 2, 2026) | R35,000+ | R25,000+ (more choice) |
| Collector premium | Significant (blister SWB) | Modest |
| Insurance cost | Similar | Similar |
SWB Pricing (2026)
SWBs command a rarity premium — especially blister fender models. Expect to pay 15–40% more than an equivalent LWB for the same year and condition.
LWB Pricing (2026)
LWBs offer better value-per-rand in most market conditions — more supply, clearer pricing benchmarks, and lower collector premiums make them easier to buy and sell confidently.
Which Should You Buy?
Answer 6 questions — we’ll tell you which body style fits your life.
Buy the SWB if the trail comes first
The SWB Pajero is for the enthusiast who knows what they want. The departure angle matters. The canvas top canvas top matters. The rarity and the character matter. If you’re buying one Pajero and you’d be on serious technical terrain regularly — or if you’re building a collector piece — the SWB is the right answer. Find the best blister fender example your budget allows, have it inspected properly, and drive it for the next decade. You won’t regret it.
Buy the LWB if life is the adventure
The LWB Pajero is for the buyer who doesn’t want to compromise between capability and real-world utility. A family, a fridge, a week’s kit and a rooftop tent — the LWB does all of this while still being capable enough to complete any SA trail you’re likely to drive. More supply, better pricing reference, and easier daily-driver duties make the LWB the rational, rewarding choice for the overwhelming majority of South African Pajero buyers.