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Brazil, as the region’s largest economy, is the dominant force in truck production and sales, with major manufacturers like Volkswagen Truck & Bus (now part of Traton), Mercedes-Benz, Volvo, Scania, and Iveco operating significant assembly and distribution networks there. Argentina, Chile, Peru, and Colombia are also important markets, though on a smaller scale, each reflecting their own blend of industrial priorities and logistics needs. Over time, the region’s trucking sector has adapted to tough road conditions, economic volatility, and a diverse mix of fleet operators ranging from large logistics groups to small owner-operators creating a market highly attuned to durability, affordability, and serviceability.
Environmental and regulatory pressures have been growing in South America, though progress remains uneven across countries. Brazil, for example, has implemented Proconve P8 standards, roughly equivalent to Euro VI, to curb emissions from diesel-powered trucks, forcing manufacturers to update engine technology and aftertreatment systems. However, enforcement of such regulations can be inconsistent, particularly outside urban centers, and many older, higher-emission trucks remain in circulation due to the financial difficulties faced by smaller operators in upgrading their fleets.
In parallel, a growing push for sustainability is encouraging exploration of alternative fuels, such as biodiesel blends and natural gas, which have been gaining traction in Brazil thanks to abundant local feedstock and supportive policies. Electric trucks, while making headlines in pilot programs, still face major hurdles due to high initial costs, limited charging infrastructure, and uncertain grid capacity in many parts of the continent. Nevertheless, the medium and heavy-duty segment is expected to gradually incorporate more low- and zero-emission vehicles, especially for urban distribution and vocational uses in coming years.
According to the research report “South America Medium and Heavy-Duty Truck Market Outlook, 2030” the South America Medium and Heavy-Duty Truck market is projected to reach USD 19.12 Billion by 2030. Economic factors continue to shape the South American truck industry in profound ways. Periods of high inflation, currency volatility, and political uncertainty have historically made investment in new trucks unpredictable, with many operators stretching the lifecycle of their existing assets far beyond what is typical in North America or Europe.
Access to affordable financing remains a persistent challenge, especially for smaller transport companies and owner-drivers, despite some government-backed credit lines and manufacturer-led leasing schemes. The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated these difficulties, disrupting both supply chains and customer budgets, while driving up the costs of new vehicles and replacement parts.
Even so, recovery in sectors such as agriculture and mining has helped boost freight demand, encouraging fleet owners to consider fleet renewal, albeit cautiously. As global commodity prices fluctuate, so too does transport demand, creating cyclical swings that manufacturers and dealers must learn to navigate with flexible service and support models.
Technological modernization is slowly transforming the region’s trucking sector. Adoption of telematics and digital fleet management tools is growing, as operators look to improve efficiency, safety, and compliance with stricter weight and emissions rules. Connectivity is emerging as a competitive differentiator, especially for larger fleet operators who can afford the investment in advanced data-driven systems. Meanwhile, driver shortages and road safety remain pressing issues, pushing manufacturers to design more comfortable, safer, and easier-to-operate vehicles that can attract and retain qualified drivers.
However, chronic infrastructure challenges from poor road quality to inadequate truck stops and border crossing bottlenecks continue to hamper productivity and add to operating costs. Governments and multilateral lenders have been investing in infrastructure modernization programs, but progress is often slow due to bureaucratic delays and funding constraints.
Market Drivers
- Agricultural and Mining Sector Growth: South America’s strong agricultural exports (soybeans, beef, coffee) and significant mining activity (copper, iron ore, lithium) create high, ongoing demand for robust medium and heavy-duty trucks to haul goods from remote production areas to ports and processing centers.
- Regional Infrastructure Modernization: Many governments in South America are investing in highway improvements, port upgrades, and cross-border transport corridors to enhance trade competitiveness, directly stimulating demand for reliable trucking capacity.
Market Challenges
- Economic Volatility and Currency Instability: Chronic inflation, exchange rate swings, and political uncertainties in countries like Argentina and Brazil make it difficult for transport operators to finance new trucks or plan fleet renewals confidently.
- Aging Fleets and Limited Access to Credit: A large portion of South America’s truck population is aging, but small and independent operators often lack affordable financing options to replace outdated, inefficient, and polluting vehicles.
Market Trends
- Gradual Shift to Cleaner Fuels (Biodiesel/Natural Gas) : There is a growing trend toward using locally available alternative fuels such as biodiesel blends and compressed natural gas to reduce emissions, supported by policy incentives in countries like Brazil.
- Technology Uptake in Fleet Management: Larger fleets are increasingly adopting telematics, real-time tracking, and predictive maintenance solutions to reduce costs, improve safety, and manage operations more effectively, even in a volatile economic climate.
South America’s vast geography, combined with its strong dependence on agriculture, mining, and bulk commodities, creates a critical need for heavy trucks capable of hauling significant loads across long distances and rugged terrain. From moving soybeans, grains, and beef out of rural production areas to transporting minerals from mines deep in the interior, these trucks must operate reliably over poorly maintained roads, mountainous routes, and seasonal conditions that strain lighter-duty vehicles. Heavy-duty trucks with capacities over 16 tonnes maximize transport efficiency by reducing the number of trips needed, lowering the cost per ton transported, and delivering the durability required for tough operating environments.
They are also essential for linking remote areas to the limited number of high-capacity ports and distribution hubs serving international trade. As infrastructure gradually modernizes but still faces gaps in many countries, operators continue to depend on heavy trucks for their robustness, payload advantage, and ability to navigate inconsistent road conditions.
Internal combustion engine (ICE) propulsion leads the South American medium and heavy-duty truck market because it delivers the durability, affordability, and fueling flexibility needed for demanding freight transport across challenging and often underdeveloped infrastructure.
In South America, where trucking routes traverse vast rural areas, rugged landscapes, and unevenly developed road networks, diesel-powered ICE trucks have proven to be the most dependable and cost-effective solution for moving goods reliably. These trucks offer the torque, range, and robustness required to haul heavy agricultural products, minerals, and industrial cargo from remote production zones to ports and cities, often over poor road conditions and steep terrain. The region’s well-established diesel fueling infrastructure and widespread mechanical know-how make ICE trucks easier to service and maintain, ensuring minimal downtime and predictable operating costs for transport operators who often work on tight margins.
Moreover, given the economic volatility and limited financing options in many South American countries, fleet owners prioritize proven, affordable technologies rather than risk investing in emerging alternatives that still face hurdles around charging infrastructure, initial costs, and operational range. While there is growing policy interest in biofuels and cleaner propulsion, these are typically adaptations of ICE technology rather than wholesale replacements.
Tractor-trailers or articulated trucks are the fastest-growing body type in South America's medium and heavy-duty truck market due to their high cargo capacity, efficiency in long-haul transportation.
The rapid growth of tractor-trailers or articulated trucks in South America's medium and heavy-duty truck market is primarily driven by the continent’s rising need for efficient long-distance freight transport, boosted by expanding regional trade, improving road networks, and growing logistics infrastructure. As South American economies like Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and Colombia intensify trade within the region and with international markets, the demand for large-capacity, fuel-efficient transport vehicles has surged.
Tractor-trailers, with their modular design that allows the tractor to pull various types of trailers, are ideal for moving goods over long distances, which is a critical requirement given South America's vast geographic expanse and widely dispersed economic hubs. These trucks are particularly valuable in agricultural and industrial logistics, especially in Brazil and Argentina, where soybeans, grains, livestock, and mining commodities are transported from rural production zones to ports and processing centers.
As agricultural exports and commodity shipments rise, fleet operators and logistics companies are increasingly turning to articulated trucks to handle bulk loads in fewer trips, thereby reducing operating costs per ton. Furthermore, the South American road freight sector is becoming more structured, with increased private investment and government funding directed toward upgrading highways and logistic corridors like Brazil's BR-163 and Argentina’s highway modernization programs which favor the operation of larger, more powerful tractor-trailer units.
Logistics transportation is leading in the South America medium and heavy-duty truck market because it is the most flexible and practical solution for connecting remote production regions to ports and urban markets across challenging and uneven infrastructure.
In South America, the movement of agricultural products, minerals, industrial goods, and consumer items relies heavily on medium and heavy-duty trucks serving logistics operations, because these vehicles can adapt to the continent’s vast geography and variable road conditions far better than rail or waterways. Many of South America’s production hubs such as soy farms in Brazil, copper mines in Chile, or cattle ranches in Argentina are located far from major ports or cities, requiring a transport mode that can reliably bridge the “first and last mile” gaps over long and sometimes poorly maintained roads.
Truck-based logistics offers the capacity and route flexibility to serve diverse regional markets, react to shifting commodity flows, and navigate unpredictable weather or seasonal bottlenecks. Moreover, the continent’s limited and underdeveloped rail networks leave trucking as the most accessible and responsive choice for door-to-door transport. As trade expands and export volumes grow, logistics transportation through medium and heavy-duty trucks continues to dominate, ensuring raw materials and finished goods reach ports for international shipment and urban areas for local consumption. With its unmatched adaptability and essential role in supporting the region’s supply chains, logistics transportation leads the South American truck market and will likely remain its backbone for years to come.
Brazil is leading in the South America medium and heavy-duty truck market because of its massive agricultural and industrial output, coupled with a road-focused transport system that makes trucking indispensable for domestic and export logistics.
Brazil dominates the South American medium and heavy-duty truck market largely because of its role as the continent’s largest agricultural and industrial economy, producing vast quantities of soybeans, beef, sugarcane, iron ore, and manufactured goods that must be transported efficiently from interior production zones to coastal ports and urban centers. Given Brazil’s continental scale, dispersed economic activity, and relatively underdeveloped rail network, road transport is the backbone of its freight movement, with trucks providing the flexibility and reach needed to connect rural areas with processing facilities and export terminals.
Heavy and medium-duty trucks handle everything from grain harvests in the Midwest to construction materials in booming urban areas like São Paulo and Rio de Janeiro, supporting domestic trade and international shipments. Brazil’s strong commercial vehicle manufacturing sector, with major global players operating locally, further supports the supply and modernization of trucking fleets. In addition, government investments in highway infrastructure and programs to improve freight corridors keep road transport central to economic competitiveness.
Considered in this report
- Historic Year: 2019
- Base year: 2024
- Estimated year: 2025
- Forecast year: 2030
Aspects covered in this report
- Medium and Heavy Duty Truck Market with its value and forecast along with its segments
- Various drivers and challenges
- On-going trends and developments
- Top profiled companies
- Strategic recommendation
By Vehicle Class
- Medium (3.5 to 16 Tonnes)
- Heavy (16 Tonnes and Above)
By Propulsion
- ICE
- Electric
- Other
By Body Type
- Rigid Trucks
- Tractor-Trailers / Articulated Truck
- Tipper / Dump Trucks
- Other
By end users
- Logistic transportation
- Construction and Mining
- Agriculture and Forestry
- Utility And Municipal
- Other
The approach of the report:
This report consists of a combined approach of primary as well as secondary research. Initially, secondary research was used to get an understanding of the market and listing out the companies that are present in the market. The secondary research consists of third-party sources such as press releases, annual report of companies, analyzing the government generated reports and databases.After gathering the data from secondary sources primary research was conducted by making telephonic interviews with the leading players about how the market is functioning and then conducted trade calls with dealers and distributors of the market. Post this we have started doing primary calls to consumers by equally segmenting consumers in regional aspects, tier aspects, age group, and gender. Once we have primary data with us we have started verifying the details obtained from secondary sources.
Intended audience
This report can be useful to industry consultants, manufacturers, suppliers, associations & organizations related to this industry, government bodies and other stakeholders to align their market-centric strategies. In addition to marketing & presentations, it will also increase competitive knowledge about the industry.Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Mercedes-Benz Group AG
- Isuzu Motors Limited
- Toyota Motor Corporation
- AB Volvo
- Ford Motor Company
- Volkswagen AG
- Iveco Group N.V.
- PACCAR Inc.