Honda Amaze (2025) Launch Review

David Taylor

21 May 2025

Honda Amaze (2025) Launch Review

The new Honda Amaze small sedan has landed in SA. It has been Honda’s bestseller for some time, but can the new model replicate that success? We get behind the wheel.

Despite the popularity of compact crossovers/small SUVs in our market, the Honda Amaze small sedan is the Japanese brand’s best-selling model in SA (with more than 10 000 units sold in the past 10 years).

Now in its 3rd generation, the new Honda Amaze has arrived in Mzansi; it incorporates several revisions (more tech and convenience features have been added), but its price tag hasn’t increased substantially.

What exactly has changed?

It may be an all-new model, but given its predecessor’s success, Honda didn’t feel compelled to alter the Amaze’s packaging radically – after all, why would it reimagine a product that already fits the bill?

The Amaze is 3 995 mm long and has a 2 470-mm wheelbase (the same as before), but the model has grown slightly in terms of width and height. The real strength of a vehicle like this is luggage capacity (boot space), which is rated at 416 litres, if slightly down on the previous Amaze’s 420 litres.

The Honda Amaze’s line-up comprises 3 derivatives, each of which is powered by a naturally-aspirated (non-turbocharged) 1.2-litre 4-cylinder petrol engine. The motor, which produces peak outputs of 66 kW and 110 Nm of torque, is paired with either a 5-speed manual gearbox or a continuously variable automatic transmission (CVT, with 7 steps that simulate gearshifts).

The Amaze is renowned for its fuel efficiency, and the new model is claimed to consume 5.5 L/100 km.

There are 2 trim grades: Trend and Comfort; both seem well specified for their respective price points.

The top-spec Comfort appears to offer the best value, it features additional airbags (taking the total to 6), auto headlamps, a 15W wireless phone charger, LED front foglamps and smarter-looking 15-inch alloy wheels. The CVT version further has steering-wheel-mounted paddle shifters and remote engine start.

This discreetly placed charger keeps your phone out of sight.

But, if your budget can’t quite reach the top tier, the Trend ticks most of the boxes with keyless entry, a reverse-view camera, parking sensors, climate control, wireless Apple CarPlay and Android Auto, USB-A and -C ports, LED headlamps, an 8-inch touchscreen and vehicle stability control, among other features.

What is the Honda Amaze like to drive?

The new Honda Amaze is a well-sorted B-segment sedan.

We drove the Honda Amaze from Cape Town’s CBD, past Cape Point and back to town via Hout Bay, but because an early-winter cold front was lashing the Western Cape, driving conditions were exceptionally poor. The rain and gale-force winds were so intense that a portion of the evaluation route was closed.

Despite the soaked roads, we were happy with the Amaze’s reassuring roadholding and abundant front-end grip. Just because the car is relatively inexpensive, it doesn’t mean that it lacks driving refinement.

We were satisfied with the motor’s performance (with 2 occupants in the car), both from a standstill and in terms of in-gear acceleration. The indicated fuel consumption was under 7 L/100 km, which is fair.

Ride quality is good on these newly designed 15-inch alloys.

The ride quality was good too, thanks to a pliant suspension setup and 15-inch wheels wrapped in plump 185/60 tyres. The Amaze dealt well with the variable quality of the road, which is well-used by locals and tourists. The steering setup is on the lighter side, but it gives the vehicle a feeling of “light-footedness”.

As for the Honda’s performance, it wasn’t exactly energetic. It’s notable because the Amaze’s launch was at sea level, where naturally-aspirated petrol engines don’t lose 17% of their peak power outputs (as they do in the thinner air of Gauteng). Granted, the slick-shifting 5-speed manual gearbox is effortless to use, but we got the impression that comfortable commuting is the sedan’s forte; dynamism matters little.

The instrument cluster combines digital and analogue elements.

The CVT drones (accompanied by a strained engine note) when hard acceleration is required, but that scenario is well outside the sedan’s comfort zone (the model was designed with efficiency in mind). Yet, given gentle accelerator inputs, the Honda is a comfortable and, importantly, easy-to-drive proposition.

It’s concerning that most of the model’s customers will be based in Gauteng, where the Amaze’s 66 kW is reduced to 55 kW. That, in combination with 4 adults on board, may result in lethargic performance.

To be fair to Honda, the drawback of utilising a small-capacity, non-turbocharged engine “upcountry” is not exclusive to the Amaze. My colleague Ashley Oldfield, who recently drove the Suzuki Dzire, voiced the same concern about the Amaze’s rival, which musters just 60 kW from its 1.2-litre 3-cylinder mill.

The Amaze is happiest when cruising around in town, but it should be reasonably competent on the open road.

How much does the new Honda Amaze cost in South Africa?

Amaze 1.2 Trend MTR254 900
Amaze 1.2 Comfort MTR274 900
Amaze 1.2 Comfort CVTR294 900

The prices of the Honda Amaze have not increased radically compared with those of its predecessor. Prices for the same derivatives were R253 600, R272 900, and R292 900, which we find impressive.

Honda includes a 5-year/200 000 km warranty, 3 years of AA roadside assistance and a new 4-year/60 000 km service plan, which is twice as long as the previous model’s 2-year/30 000 km plan. Impressive.

Summary

B-segment sedans aren’t as popular as they were – some would argue that they primarily serve e-hailing and fleet operators – but the Amaze’s new-vehicle sales figures suggest the model has broader appeal.

The new-gen Honda Amaze has not changed radically, but it didn’t need to. This time, Honda looked beyond the model’s traditional pillars of efficiency and low running costs, and sought to optimise value by cramming even more tech and convenience features into its product, to the benefit of consumers.

We look forward to putting the Honda’s small sedan through its paces for an in-depth assessment soon.

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David Taylor

David Taylor

Having contributed to multiple motoring titles as well helping run the public relations machine of the Johannesburg International Motor Show, Dave has experience in both sides of the motoring industry. He's based in the Western Cape and is responsible for the performance testing, photography & weekly YouTube news for Cars.co.za.

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