Your work vehicle is a business tool. It needs to carry gear, tow trailers, survive jobsites, and not cost you a fortune in fuel and repairs. We ranked every tradie vehicle on the specs that matter for work, not weekends.
Best Utes for Tradies
| Ute | Payload | Towing | Fuel | Warranty | Price From |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Isuzu D-Max SX (single cab) | 1,235kg | 3,500kg | 7.2L | 6yr/150k | $36,900 |
| Toyota HiLux SR (single cab) | 1,180kg | 3,500kg | 7.6L | 5yr | $38,550 |
| Ford Ranger XL (single cab) | 1,195kg | 3,500kg | 7.4L | 5yr | $39,990 |
| Mitsubishi Triton GLX | 1,090kg | 3,100kg | 7.6L | 10yr/200k | $33,540 |
| GWM Cannon | 920kg | 3,000kg | 8.0L | 7yr | $31,490 |
Single cab is the tradie pick. Longer tray, higher payload, cheaper insurance. If you need rear seats for apprentices, go dual cab but expect 200-300kg less payload.
Best Value: Mitsubishi Triton GLX
Cheapest name-brand ute at $33,540, and it comes with a 10-year / 200,000km warranty. That's unmatched in the segment. For a fleet tradie ute that just needs to work reliably for a decade, nothing beats this. Towing is lower at 3,100kg (vs 3,500kg for the others) but that's enough for most trade trailers.
Best Vans for Tradies
| Van | Cargo Volume | Payload | Price From |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toyota HiAce | 6,200L | 1,235kg | $44,340 |
| Hyundai Staria Load | 5,000L | 1,050kg | $41,500 |
| Ford Transit Custom | 5,800L | 1,300kg | $47,990 |
The HiAce is the default tradie van for a reason. Massive cargo space, Toyota reliability, and you can fit out the interior with shelving and racking systems from companies like System Educa or Sortimo.
Tax Deductions for Tradie Vehicles
If you have an ABN, your work vehicle is tax deductible. Here's what you can claim:
- Instant asset write-off: Deduct the full purchase price in the year you buy it (check the current threshold, it changes regularly)
- Fuel: 100% deductible for business use. Keep a logbook or use the ATO's cents-per-kilometre method.
- Insurance, rego, servicing: All deductible proportional to business use
- Loan interest: If you finance the vehicle, the interest is deductible
- Depreciation: If you don't use instant asset write-off, you can depreciate over the vehicle's effective life
Not financial advice. Talk to your accountant about your specific situation. But broadly, a $50,000 ute might only cost you $30-35k after tax deductions if you use it primarily for business.
Running Costs Per Year (Trade Use, 25,000 km)
| Ute | Fuel/yr | Service/yr | Insurance | Total/yr |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| D-Max SX | $3,330 | $750 | $1,600 | $5,680 |
| HiLux SR | $3,515 | $800 | $1,800 | $6,115 |
| Ranger XL | $3,423 | $840 | $1,750 | $6,013 |
| Triton GLX | $3,515 | $700 | $1,400 | $5,615 |
The Triton is the cheapest to run thanks to low insurance and Mitsubishi's affordable servicing. The D-Max is close behind. Over 5 years at trade km, the difference between cheapest and most expensive is about $2,500. Not nothing, but not a deal-breaker either.
Ute vs Van: Quick Decision Guide
- Electrician, plumber, HVAC: Van. Tools locked up, shelving systems, weatherproof.
- Builder, landscaper, concreter: Ute. Open tray for bulky materials, towing for trailers.
- Painter, cleaner, handyman: Either works. Van if you carry ladders internally, ute if you need the tray for gear.
Compare payload, tray size, and towing for any ute on CarSorted.
Compare these cars yourself
200+ specs, fuel costs, safety ratings, braking distance, and speed vs range calculator.
Disclaimer: All information in this article was believed to be correct at the time of publishing (3 April 2026). Prices are manufacturer recommended retail prices (RRP) and may vary by state, dealer, and options. Specifications, government incentives, and rebates can change without notice. Always verify details with the manufacturer or relevant authority before making a purchase decision. Running cost estimates are based on average Australian driving conditions at 15,000 km/year. All opinions are editorial and independent. CarSorted does not accept payment for recommendations or rankings.
Published by CarSorted Editorial Team · 3 April 2026
Comments (0)
Sign in to join the conversation
No comments yet. Be the first!