Guide
4x4 trail grading in South Africa explained
Trail grades are useful, but they are never a guarantee. Weather, erosion, driver skill and vehicle setup change the real difficulty.
Grade 1 to Grade 5
| Grade | Typical meaning | Planning note |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Easy scenic or soft-road route | Still confirm surface and access. |
| 2 | Easy 4x4 trail with mild obstacles | Good for careful newer drivers in dry weather. |
| 3 | Intermediate trail with technical sections | Recovery basics and a second vehicle are wise. |
| 4 | Difficult route with steep, rocky, muddy or rutted sections | Experienced drivers and capable vehicles recommended. |
| 5 | Extreme route where damage or recovery may be likely | Do not attempt without experience, equipment and owner guidance. |
Why grades vary
A trail marked Grade 3 in dry weather can feel like Grade 4 after rain. Tyres, clearance, wheelbase, diff-locks, load and driver experience all matter.
Before you rely on a grade
- Confirm current conditions with owner.
- Ask whether bypasses exist.
- Ask about minimum vehicle requirements.
- Ask about recovery availability and emergency contact options.