How Ineos plans to win over Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series buyers

Share


Niche manufacturer Ineos Automotive is leveraging its personal approach to customer service and a slowly expanding support network to convert Australia’s rusted-on Toyota LandCruiser 70 Series loyalists.

Formed after Land Rover wouldn’t sell the tooling and manufacturing hardware for the original Land Rover Defender to British billionaire and chemical engineer, Sir Jim Ratcliffe, Ineos Automotive currently offers SUV and ute versions of the Grenadier 4×4, both of which compete directly with the 70 Series.

However, Toyota holds a dominant position in the local market, with the 70 Series racking up 10,301 sales in ute guise alone last year – thousands more than the next most popular heavy-duty ladder-frame off-roader. Ineos, meanwhile, has averaged roughly 1000 sales per year since launching Down Under in 2022.

That huge discrepancy can be chalked down to several factors, including Toyota’s widely recognised brand, its sprawling network of approximately 300 dealers, and the LandCruiser’s long-held reputation for reliability and mechanical simplicity.

CarExpert can save you thousands on a new car. Click here to get a great deal.

As such, with just 26 dealers, a name still unfamiliar to many buyers, and a product that’s yet to demonstrate its long-term durability, Ineos is very much caught in a David vs Goliath battle to capture market share from its Japanese rival.

But rather than shy away from the challenge, Ineos is embracing and even exploiting its underdog status, according to local boss Justin Hocevar.

“What we just have to do as a team is make sure that we are on our A-game all the time with regards to supporting customers wherever they are,” Mr Hocevar told CarExpert at the launch of the model year 2026 (MY26) Grenadier.

“We’ve got some stories of people who’ve had something happen – something’s broken, or they’ve broken something – in really remote locations, and we’ve been able to snap to attention, move heaven and earth to get a part to them quicker than I would say the standardised processes of a large corporate could do.

“And then it’s about giving them the right tech support and making the right people accessible as well – if somebody who doesn’t really know the vehicle that well has the ability to connect with someone who does – even if that’s virtually – then we can really help.