Sazgar is the third largest auto company in Pakistan. How did it get here?

A well-time bet on assembling Chinese cars, and hybrid electric vehicles, has allowed the rickshaw manufacturer to crack into the top three, though staying there may be about to get tougher

For more than three decades, the hierarchy of Pakistan’s passenger-car market resembled a well-rehearsed Kabuki: Suzuki ruled the mass segment, Toyota presided over the upper-middle, Honda filled the aspirational middle-class niche – and everyone else fought for crumbs. That appears to have changed.

With the Pakistani auto market being more filled with nascent competitors, not all of whom are publicly listed, data on the industry as a whole is not as easy as once used to be when one only really needed to look at three companies. But based on a rudimentary analysis conducted by Profit, it appears that Sazgar may become the third largest auto company in Pakistan by revenue during the first quarter of calendar year 2025.

We have covered the rise of Sazgar – and indeed the other competitors to the Big Three Japanese car companies – before. But that was when it seemed like an interesting nascent set of challengers. Now the challengers are starting to have real heft. How did this come to pass?

To answer that question, we must first provide some context about the industry, and how it is doing.

 

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Zain Naeem
Zain Naeem
Zain is a business journalist at Profit, and can be reached at [email protected]

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