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Your career doesn't look like your mother's: Your car finance doesn't have to either

You built your client list from scratch. You negotiated your own rates. You turned a skill, a passion, or a side project into something that pays the bills and then some. So why should the way you finance a car still be designed for someone who has never worked the way you do? The short answer is: it does not have to be.

More South African women are earning on their own terms than ever before. The world has a lot more options now. Freelancing, consulting, creating content, running small businesses, and building careers that do not fit neatly into a job title or an organisational chart are common now. And whilst the financial world has been slower to catch up, the gap is closing.

The payslip is not the whole story

For a long time, vehicle finance felt like a glass ceiling built over anyone without a fixed monthly salary. The assumption being that without a traditional payslip, you could not demonstrate reliable income. For many self-employed and freelance earners, that assumption has been a real source of frustration.

Financial institutions such as WesBank are increasingly moving away from this narrow view. What lenders are genuinely trying to understand is straightforward: can you afford this commitment, and do you have a track record of managing your finances responsibly? A payslip is one way to answer those questions but there are others.

"The nature of work has shifted significantly, and responsible lenders need to reflect that," says Lebogang Gaoaketse, Head of Marketing and Communication at WesBank. "What we are ultimately assessing is whether an applicant can afford the commitment they are taking on and there are several ways to demonstrate that beyond a payslip."

Freelancing, consulting, creating content, running small businesses, and building careers that do not fit neatly into a job title or an organisational chart are common now.

What you can use instead

If you are freelancing, self-employed, or running your own venture, the following documentation can support your WesBank vehicle finance application:

  • Months' bank statements to show your cash flow patterns over time
  • Invoices and client contracts that confirm you have ongoing and upcoming work

Alongside your documents, lenders will assess your overall affordability, looking at your income relative to your monthly expenses and existing financial commitments. Your credit score and repayment history also matter, as they reflect the kind of financial discipline that speaks for itself.

Building an income on your own terms takes discipline, resilience, and financial awareness.

Get your house in order first

The most empowering thing you can do before applying is to be prepared. Keep your financial records up to date, stay on top of your credit profile, and be able to show a consistent income picture over time. The stronger and clearer that picture, the more confident a lender can be in saying yes.

It is also worth being honest with yourself about what is comfortably affordable. Choosing a vehicle that works within your monthly cash flow rather than one that pushes its limits is a sound financial decision that puts you in a position of strength.

Building an income on your own terms takes discipline, resilience, and financial awareness. Those are precisely the qualities that make a strong finance applicant. The documentation requirements exist to tell a story and if you have been running your hustle well, it is a story worth telling.

Vehicle finance for the self-employed is not out of reach. With the right preparation and a clear picture of your finances, it is well within yours.For more information on vehicle finance options, visit wesbank.co.za.

Wesbank

 

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