Ford Puma vs Jetour T2

A proper head-to-head in South Africa — we cover price, performance, petrol economy, safety and what it'll actually cost you to own each one long term.

Includes an archived model

Current and archived cars are compared side by side. Archived models keep their verified historical specs, while price labels show last-listed context rather than current new-car availability.

Ford Puma
Ford Puma in South Africa

Ford Puma

1.0T EcoBoost ST-Line Automatic Petrol Automatic Archive reference
ZAR 459,900 last listed
No longer sold new Specs stay visible for owner and used-car comparisons.
⚡ 92 kW 🔧 170 Nm ⛽ 16.4 km/l
VS
Jetour T2 in South Africa

Jetour T2

Odyssey 2.0TD+7DCT 4WD Petrol Automatic
ZAR 679,900 ex-showroom
⚡ 180 kW 🔧 375 Nm ⛽ 9.3 km/l
Add a 3rd car

At a Glance — Who Wins What

Performance T2
Fuel Economy Puma
🛡 Safety Puma
📦 Practicality T2
🔑 Ownership T2
Puma starts ZAR 569900 cheaper Puma from ZAR 389,900 · T2 from ZAR 569,900

Key Specs Side by Side

The specs that matter most — highlighted where one car leads.

Spec Puma T2
Engine Power 92 180
Torque 170 375
Engine Size 999 1998
Claimed Mileage 16.4 9.3
Ground Clearance 170 220
Boot Space 456 580
Airbags 8 Front, front side, and curtain airbags
Kerb Weight 1325 -
Seating Capacity 5 5
Warranty 3 -

= leads in this spec

Archived models stay fully comparable. Verified specs remain visible; historical fields that were not source-confirmed are marked Not confirmed instead of being guessed.

The Bottom Line

T2 has a slight advantage, but Puma remains highly competitive.

Where They Actually Differ

Performance T2 +37 pts
Efficiency Puma +25 pts
Safety Puma +5 pts
Practicality T2 +13 pts
Ownership T2 +13 pts

What Each Car Gets Right (and Wrong)

Puma

Strengths
  • Better fuel efficiency
  • Stronger safety package
Weak Spots
  • Less powerful engine setup
  • Less practical in daily usage
  • Shorter warranty coverage
Best suited to: Fuel Efficiency
🏆 Overall Winner

T2

Strengths
  • More powerful engine output
  • More practical for daily use
  • Better long-term ownership value
Weak Spots
  • Lower fuel efficiency
  • Less comprehensive safety features
Best suited to: Highway Driving Family Usage

Which One's Right for You?

Puma

  • Buyers looking for better fuel efficiency
  • Families prioritising stronger safety equipment

T2

  • Drivers who prioritise strong highway performance and overtaking power
  • Large families needing more practicality and usability
  • Long-term owners valuing warranty and ownership peace of mind

Full Specs, Side by Side

Archived cars use verified historical spec records. Rows remain comparable; unavailable historical values are shown plainly rather than estimated.

Spec Puma T2
Model Introduced Year 2023 2026
Generation First generation Puma in South Africa Current local listing
Facelift History New model introduced in South Africa Not listed by current South African source page.
Facelift Launched Since Original current-generation version 2026
Facelift Version Ending Discontinued - exact end year not confirmed Current
Body Style Not confirmed SUV
Model Year Not confirmed Current
Production Status Not confirmed Active
Segment Not confirmed SUV
Vehicle Type Not confirmed SUV
Spec Puma T2
Ground Clearance 170 mm 220 mm
Wheelbase 2594 mm 2800 mm
Length 4186 mm 4785 mm
Width 1805 mm 2006 mm
Height 1531 mm 1880 mm
Kerb Weight 1325 kg -
Gross Vehicle Weight 1775 kg 2285 kg
Seating Capacity 5 5
Boot Space 456 l 580 l
Towing Capacity 1200 kg -
Front Track Width 1541 mm 1685 mm
Rear Track Width 1534 mm 1695 mm
Turning Radius 5.4 m -
Boot Volume 456 l 580 l
Seats 5 5
Fuel Tank Capacity 42 l 70 l
Gross Vehicle Mass Kg 1775 kg 2285 kg
Ground Clearance Max 170 mm 220 mm
Ground Clearance Min 170 mm 220 mm
Ground Clearance Mm 170 mm 220 mm
Height Mm 1531 mm 1880 mm
Length Mm 4186 mm 4785 mm
Cargo Volume 456 l 580 l
Tare Mass Kg 1325 kg -
Turning Circle 5.4 m -
Turning Circle M 5.4 m -
Width Mm 1805 mm 2006 mm
Load Bed Length Not confirmed Not Applicable
Load Bed Width Not confirmed Not Applicable
Boot Space Seats Folded Not confirmed 1494 l
Gross Combined Mass Kg Not confirmed 3885 kg
Loadbox Length Mm Not confirmed Not Applicable
Loadbox Width Mm Not confirmed Not Applicable

Overall Verdict Score

Decision-grade view of the winner, score gap and category strengths.

Weighted / 100
Verdict readout

T2 leads by 8 points

T2 has a slight advantage, but Puma remains highly competitive.

Winner 70 /100
Lead 8 points
Data 72% confidence
70
#1 Winner

T2

72% data confidence 3 strong categories
Best at Safety 94 Check Efficiency 39
Performance 77
Efficiency 39
Safety 94
Practicality 74
Ownership 56
Leads by 8 points
62
#2

Puma

86% data confidence 1 strong categories
Best at Safety 99 Check Performance 40
Performance 40
Efficiency 64
Safety 99
Practicality 61
Ownership 43
Performance 24% Safety 22% Practicality 22% Efficiency 17% Ownership 15%
Category leaders What moves the verdict
Performance T2 +37 Efficiency Puma +25 Safety Puma +5 Practicality T2 +13 Ownership T2 +13

Very close match. Final decision depends on buyer preference.

Why this score View full breakdown
Overall Winner

T2

Performance 77/100
Efficiency 39/100
Safety 94/100
Practicality 74/100
Ownership 56/100

Puma

Performance 40/100
Efficiency 64/100
Safety 99/100
Practicality 61/100
Ownership 43/100

So, Which One Should You Buy?

🏆 Jetour T2 wins with 70 pts vs 62 pts for Puma

In structured scoring, T2 emerges as the stronger overall package. However, Puma may appeal to buyers prioritising different factors. Ultimately, the right choice depends on your driving priorities in South Africa.

Buyers Also Looked At These

Other comparisons that people in the same boat tend to check out.

Questions Buyers Usually Ask

On our scoring the T2 edges ahead overall. That said, the right choice depends on what you actually use the car for — the breakdown above shows exactly where each one wins and loses.

Efficiency scores: Puma 64 vs T2 39. In the real world, diesel variants of either car will beat the claimed figure on long highways and fall short in Joburg traffic.

Safety scores: Puma 99, T2 94. Check each model page for NCAP ratings and which trim levels include AEB and blind-spot monitoring — those features aren't always standard.

Long-term ownership scores: Puma 43, T2 56. Service intervals, parts availability in SA, and whether a service plan is bundled all factor in — check the individual variant specs for that detail.

Practicality scores: Puma 61, T2 74. This covers boot space, seat flexibility, and day-to-day usability — not just interior dimensions on paper.

Performance scores: Puma 40, T2 77. This looks at real-world pace — 0–100 kph, highway flexibility, and how either car feels when you actually need to overtake on an N-road.

Resale varies with colour, spec, and market timing, but Japanese brands — and Toyota specifically — have a strong track record in SA. Check current used prices for both on AutoTrader to see the real gap right now.

Ground clearance and 4WD availability are what matter most here. Scroll to the spec table above to compare both side by side — if either model offers a 4WD variant, that's the version worth comparing.

Fuel, insurance, and service costs are the big three. Diesel variants of both models typically save R800–R1,500/month in fuel at current SA pump prices. The T2 edges the overall ownership score, but check whether either variant includes a service plan — that changes the monthly maths significantly.

The T2 scores better overall, but neither car is a bad buy here. It comes down to what features matter to you — check the full spec table above to see exactly what you gain and lose at each price point.

In Depth — Breaking It All Down

The comparison between Puma and T2 in South Africa evaluates performance, efficiency, safety, practicality and long-term ownership value.

Performance: Puma scores 40 vs 77.

Efficiency: Puma scores 64 vs 39.

Safety: Puma scores 99 vs 94.

Practicality: Puma scores 61 vs 74.

Ownership: Puma scores 43 vs 56.

Final structured scoring gives T2 the advantage in this comparison.