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When you view a vehicle through a risk and lifecycle lens, it stops being a lifestyle purchase and starts looking like a depreciating mechanical system with a great leather interior and ignored warning lights and the quiet hope that the noise disappears on its own.
According to dotsure.co.za warranty claims expert Louis Stander, most costly mechanical failures don’t arrive dramatically, they creep in quietly. “Small oversights often trigger disproportionate financial outcomes,” he notes. This is where understanding what a car warranty covers becomes less about fine print and more about financial foresight. “When you look at workshop trends, it’s clear that certain parts fail more often and cost more over time. That’s why extended cover is starting to look more like sensible risk management than an optional extra.”, added Stander.
According to Stander, preventable failures dominate workshop floors; with incorrect lubricants, skipped service intervals and ignored dashboard warnings accounting for a significant share of those mechanical breakdowns. “People go for the cheapest oil instead of the correct oil,” he says. “Over time, that decision compounds into bearing wear, overheating and premature engine failure”.

As vehicles age, high-temperature friction components begin to dictate long-term vehicle costs. Internal engine parts like piston rings, compression rings and bearings operate under constant stress, gradually wearing down as lubricants lose viscosity. The real issue, Stander explains, “isn’t that parts fail, it’s that failures are predictable. Routine oil quality checks and dust-cover inspections are simple preventative maintenance strategies for car parts that reduce exposure, before premature wear sets in.”
At the top of the risk curve sit engines, gearboxes and drivetrains. When clients ask “what does car warranty cover?”, engines are usually top of mind. Engine failures often stem from oil pump wear, leading to uneven oil distribution and internal damage. Left unchecked, engine repairs in South Africa can range from R60,000 to R250,000, depending on make and model. This is why engine and transmission cover forms the backbone of most extended car warranty cover structures.
Gearboxes, both manual and automatic, introduce another layer of exposure. Manual gearboxes fail through worn gears and bearings; automatics compound risk with hydraulic pressure systems and electronic regulation. “Automatics simply have more moving and electrical parts,” says Stander, which explains why repair costs climb faster.

Beyond the engine bay, drivetrain components such as differentials, transfer cases and drive shafts often signal failure through knocking or whining noises. Damage escalation can occur within 2,000–3,000 km if ignored. These are precisely the risks extended car warranty cover is designed to absorb.
Suspension and steering systems, meanwhile, reflect uniquely South African conditions. Poor road infrastructure accelerates wear, increasing risk to safety and durability.
Similarly, braking systems fail beyond pads alone. Discs, calliper bushes, seals and sliding pins all age quietly, often only announcing themselves through screeching indicators installed by manufacturers as a last warning.
Modern vehicles are more interconnected than ever. Control units, sensors and sender units constantly communicate to deliver performance efficiencies – but one failure can cascade across systems. “If one fails, normally more than one part is affected,” Stander explains. Replacement costs for sensors or control units can easily reach R50,000, making electrical and electronic components cover increasingly critical within extended warranties.

Certain systems consistently appear in extended warranty claims data:
As Stander puts it, “Most people aren’t shocked by big, complicated breakdowns — it’s the everyday wear-and-tear items that catch them off guard. Things like shocks, CV joints and stabiliser links add up fast. An extended warranty doesn’t replace regular maintenance, but it does take the sting out when the bigger bills hit.”
From a strategic standpoint, an extended car warranty cover – such as dotsure.co.za’s MotorXtender which covers over 100 parts from critical components such as engines, manual and automatic transmissions, differentials, steering mechanisms, braking systems, cooling systems, turbochargers, fuel systems and key electrical components – becomes key. They don’t replace good maintenance discipline, they complement it. Here are Stander’s last words of wisdom, “Follow your owner’s manual. If you’re unsure, contact the dealer. That’s how you protect yourself before the bill arrives.”
Ts & Cs and possible exclusions may apply and can be obtained by emailing az.oc.erustod@su2u. Dotsure Limited (Registration number 2006/000723/06) is a licensed non-life insurer and authorised financial services provider (FSP39925).