After weeks of carefully staged reveals, Citroën’s Basalt SUV-Coupé has officially arrived in South Africa – and the final product suggests the brand was never just selling a car, but a way of thinking about one.
Now seen in full, the Basalt resolves into a shape that feels intentionally different within the B-SUV space. The silhouette leans into a fastback profile without losing the visual cues buyers expect from a crossover – ground clearance, stance, and a sense of everyday durability. It’s a design that doesn’t try to dominate the segment, but rather sidesteps its conventions. See the Basalt in action.
That approach carries through to how the car is experienced. Instead of leaning into performance-first messaging or feature overload, the Basalt focuses on how it fits into daily life. The emphasis is on ease – how it rides, how it feels in traffic, how it handles the stop-start rhythm of urban commuting and the longer stretches that follow on weekends.
At its core, the fundamentals are familiar but well judged. A 1.2-litre turbocharged petrol engine delivers 81 kW and 205 Nm through a six-speed automatic transmission, balancing efficiency with enough responsiveness for typical mixed driving conditions. It’s not trying to rewrite expectations – it’s aiming to meet them without friction.
Inside, the Basalt reflects a broader shift in how interiors are being considered. Layout and materials feel deliberate rather than purely functional, with a clear focus on touchpoints and usability. A 10-inch touchscreen with wireless smartphone integration handles most digital interactions, supported by a 7-inch instrument display that keeps key information accessible without overwhelming the driver.
Space remains a priority. Five-seat practicality and a 470-litre boot ensure the Basalt stays grounded in real-world needs, even as its design pushes slightly outside the segment’s usual boundaries. It’s this balance – between expression and utility – that defines the overall package.
The timing of the launch is also notable. South Africa’s B-SUV segment continues to expand, drawing in a wide mix of competitors and increasingly discerning buyers. In that environment, differentiation is harder to achieve, particularly without escalating costs. Citroën’s answer is to shift the conversation slightly – away from outright specification and towards how a car feels to live with over time.
With pricing starting at R354 900, the Basalt positions itself within reach of the segment’s core audience, while offering a perspective that leans more toward design and comfort than outright feature count. It’s a subtle recalibration rather than a dramatic disruption.
The early campaign framed the Basalt as something to be discovered in parts. Now complete, it reads less like a collection of details and more like a cohesive object – one that reflects a changing set of priorities in how cars are designed, marketed, and ultimately chosen.
In a segment defined by similarity, that shift in perspective may be the most significant feature of all.
Discover more at Citroën.co.za.






