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Friday, December 12, 2025

Bucket Seat: Renault Triber


Believe it or not, the Renault Triber is one of the most popular cars in Umhlanga Durban, yes, the home of the wealthy and astute, where Supercars prowl the streets, has them competing with this French MPV, (Well its actually Indian since its made in the subcontinent). The Triber is a clever, no-nonsense people-mover that takes clever packaging over outright power which makes it the ideal vehicle for e-hailing services like Uber and Bolt. If you need seven seats sometimes, a tiny running cost, and big flexibility in a small footprint, this is worth a long look. 


DESIGN

Out on the street the Triber doesn’t scream “seven seater” it’s compact, friendly and practical. Renault’s latest refresh sharpens the face: cleaner grille, tighter lamp graphics and slightly more modern bumpers so it looks less toy-car and more grown up than older budget MPVs. The proportions still betray its mission: short nose, tall cabin, upright greenhouse that equals usable interior space more than wow factor. What I like: the design language keeps things honest. The wheels and treatment on higher trims lift the presence enough; clever touches like a wide, low boot opening and practical door apertures make every-day life easier. It’s not premium, but it’s intentional built to be useful. 


PERFORMANCE

Under the bonnet is the familiar 1.0-litre three-cylinder petrol around 52–53 kW and 96 Nm paired to a 5-speed manual . That combination is tuned for economy and city drivability rather than outright shove. In town it’s perfectly acceptable: light steering, easy overtakes in single-lane urban traffic, and the engine will happily chug along at low revs to save fuel. On the highway, and especially loaded with six or seven aboard, the Triber feels its size and power limits. Expect shallow acceleration when fully laden and be mindful of overtakes on undulating routes  you’ll need to plan them. While the automatic Triber may seem more appealing to some, one has to take into considering the lag of the AMT box, so if you do a lot of long motorway trips the manual will be more composed and predictable. Fuel figures are strong for the segment. Renault quotes low consumption and local dealers report efficient real-world results. 


COMFORT

This is where the Triber does its biggest job: interior space and flexibility. The third row is removable and second-row seats can slide and fold to create a wide variety of configurations  cargo hauler, five-seater with large boot or full seven-seater. Boot volume can be impressive (up to around 625 litres with clever seat arrangements) which is huge for the footprint. Headroom and knee room are generous for the segment; the cabin layout has lots of small storage nooks  so family life is easy. 


Ride quality is tuned for comfort on city roads it soaks up bumps reasonably well and the raised ride height helps on speed humps and rough suburban surfaces. NVH (noise, vibration, harshness) is not luxury-calibre: the cabin gets noisier at higher speeds and with a full load, but for urban and school-run duties it’s fine. Higher trims add niceties like a bigger touchscreen, better connectivity and rear vents  useful day-to-day. 


Renault has been upgrading safety on the Triber recent local introductions have standardised multiple airbags and added kit compared with earlier budget spec levels. For South African arrivals this year Renault pushed better standard safety across the range (reports note 6 airbags as part of recent updates). Still, the Triber is a budget MPV: it’s practical and sensible, but it won’t match the passive and active safety levels of larger, more expensive family SUVs. If you prioritise crash-avoidance tech, check the spec sheet carefully for the trim you want. 


VERDICT

This is the Triber’s sweet spot. Purchase price sits in the budget family car bracket, running costs are low thanks to the small engine and good economy, and servicing/parts are straightforward (and cheap compared to larger Renaults). Insurance and tyres are also more affordable than most bigger family cars. If your budget is tight but the need for occasional seven-seat flexibility is real, the Triber makes a strong economic case. 


Buy this if: you need occasional seven-seat flexibility in a compact city footprint, want low running costs, and you value modular practicality over motorway performance. It’s a brilliant school-run / inner city family tool with enough boot space to carry luggage or a month’s grocery run when you fold seats.

Don’t buy this if: you regularly carry seven adults on long highway journeys, you crave high-speed refinement, or you want a premium interior and sporty performance. In that case step up to a larger MPV or compact SUV.

Practical tip for SA buyers: Renault has launched the refreshed Triber locally (arriving in late 2025 and already showing on dealer sites), with improved standard safety and slightly reworked pricing/trim lines so check local stock and spec levels, and compare AMT vs manual depending on your mix of city/highway use.


SPECIFICATION

Engine
1.0L NA Petrol 
Gear Box                    
5-speed Manual
Torque
96Nm 
Power
53kW
Average Fuel Consumption    
5.5L per 100km
Price
R349,149



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