We offer discount car rental, car hire in all major cities of South Africa

   SOUTH AFRICA CAR RENTAL GUIDE

Part of the Internet Travel Group
Compare & save on car rental
 
HOMEABOUT USLOCATIONSCONTACT USUSER LOGINSITE MAP 
EnglishEspañolFrançaisDeutschNederlands

Economy
Economy
194ZAR
Per day
Compact
Compact
210ZAR
Per day

JOHANNESBURG AIRPORT CAR RENTAL
Johannesburg car hire & Johannesburg car rental offers cheap and discounted car hire in South africa. Compare Johannesburg car rental rates of the most important car hire providers in Johannesburg and save on you car rental.

• Johannesburg car hire is part of Internet Travel Group - one of the largest independent car rental brokers. We offer more then 5000 car hire locations throughout the world.

• Our global buying power enables us to offer huge car rental discounts to our clients.
Car rental partners in Johannesburg Airport
For your convenience our partners have offices in Johannesburg . Please click on office details and/or terms & conditions for more info on the car hire location.

Europcar Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
243 ZAR
 Terms & Conditions
 Office Details
Alamo Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
209 ZAR
 Terms & Conditions
 Office Details
Thrifty Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
208 ZAR
 Terms & Conditions
 Office Details
Tempest Car Hire / Sixt Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
194 ZAR
 Terms & Conditions
 Office Details
Tempest Car Hire / Sixt Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
Terms & Conditions
Office Details
Tempest Car Hire / Sixt Terms & conditions for Johannesburg Car Rental
Terms & Conditions
Office Details
Get Your Instant Quote
- Johannesburg -
Johannesburg Airport
  Arrival
 
  Return
 
  Currency
  Residence
Other car rental locations in Johannesburg (Per day)
bulletJohannesburg Jet Park 208 ZARbulletJohannesburg Oxford manor 243 ZAR
bulletJohannesburg CNR Maude and West 243 ZAR
Johannesburg Airport car rental - Travel Guide

Fast-paced, frenetic JOHANNESBURG has had a reputation for immorality, greed and violence ever since its first plot auction in December 1886. Despite its status as the largest and richest city in the country, it has never been the seat of government or national political power, allowing it to concentrate fully on what it has always done best: make money and get ahead. Those priorities have over the years cut across political and racial lines: only in Jo'burg would ambitious black Africans like Nelson Mandela have been able to train in a white law firm; only in Jo'burg would creative hotspots like Sophiatown and Alexandra exist at all; and only in Jo'burg would white liberalism have been given any intellectual recognition in the dark days of apartheid.

Even so, the divisions of the old South Africa are as apparent here as anywhere else. Ridiculously opulent white mansions in leafy suburbs are protected by high walls and razor wire only a mile or two from sprawling shanty towns housing millions of intensely poor blacks. As the new political dispensation sees formerly white areas administratively yoked with the black townships so the city struggles to cope with massive pressures on housing services and law and order. Nowhere is the new tension more in evidence than in the previously all-white central business district where an influx of poor blacks and a soaring crime rate has caused a mass exodus of shops and restaurants to the northern suburbs.

There are very few conventional tourist sights in Johannesburg and some visitors fall into the trap of retreating to their hotel room too intimidated by the city's reputation to explore venturing out only to the bland safe, covered shopping malls of the northern suburbs while making hasty plans to move on. However, once you've found a convenient way of getting around either by car or in the company of a tour guide, the history, diversity and stimulating energy of the city can quickly become compelling. Johannesburg offers fascinating museums, most notably the Museum Africa in Newtown as well as excellent art galleries. A number of suburbs have a thriving café culture which by the evening transforms to a lively restaurant scene. There are shops with excellent contemporary African art and design, striking buildings, and of course the townships most easily explored on a tour but in some places somewhere you can get to under your own steam. Johannesburg is also a great place to watch sport: Ellis Park was the scene of South Africa's emotional victory in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, the IAAF World Cup was held at the neighboring athletics stadium in 1999 and the massive FNB soccer stadium on the edge of Soweto which fills to capacity for local derbies or international fixtures remains the principal venue for the country's most popular sport.

The City
Johannesburg is large, sprawling and poorly planned, with few conventional sights and a bewildering number of districts. The central business district (CBD) is the Manhattan of Africa with tall crowded office blocks crowded together and lively street life. Nearby, the Newtown Cultural Precinct is the place to head for jazz bars, theatre and the highly informative Museum Africa. The inner-city districts of Berea and Hillbrow are packed with migrants from all over the continent and are generally no-go areas for visitors. This label is now also being given to Yeoville, once the city's trendiest and most integrated suburb.

AMEXVISAMASTERCARD
PrintPrint this pageFavourites
Newsletter  Newsletter  
 
Call CenterCall Center
 
OPENING HOURS
MIAMI(EST) Mon - Fri: 06:00 - 18:00
  Sat - Sun: 06:00 - 12:00
LONDON (GMT)Mon - Fri 08:00 - 23:00
 Sat - Sun: 08:00 - 16:00
1. UK0800 0789054
2. USA 1 866 735 1715
3. AUSTRALIA1 800 210813
4. FRANCE0805 100863
 ©Copyright 1995 - 2006   South Africa Car Rental Guide part of the Internet Travel Group 

| www.bookyourgolf.net for golf vacations | www.hotelrentalgroup.com for hotel rentals |

Part of