Choosing your first sewing machine is one of those decisions that feels much bigger than it should. There are dozens of models, a wide spread of prices, and a lot of confident advice online that doesn’t always apply here at home.
So let us make it simpler. If you’re looking for the best beginner sewing machine in South Africa, the honest answer is that the best one is the machine that keeps you sewing — and choosing it well is what protects your confidence in those first few weeks.
We can help with that. We’re an authorised Brother dealer, and every week we teach beginners who are sitting down at a machine for the very first time. So we see, up close, which machines keep people going and which ones quietly put them off. We’ll be honest with you about what’s worth your money.
Part 01The one rule that matters most: don’t buy a disposable machine
If you take only one thing from this guide, take this. Don’t buy a disposable sewing machine.
You know the ones — the very cheapest machines, often unbranded, sold as a bargain. They feel like a safe way to try sewing without spending much. But they’re the most common reason a new sewist gives up.
Here’s why. A disposable machine struggles with tension, skips stitches, and fights you on anything thicker than a single layer of cotton. So when your seams pucker or your thread keeps bunching, you blame yourself — when really it’s the machine. That’s demotivating, and it’s the opposite of what we want for you.
A proper entry-level machine costs a little more, but it sews cleanly, holds its tension, and lasts for years. Because of that, every step feels like an achievement instead of a fight. Do you understand the difference? It isn’t about spending the most. It’s about not buying something designed to frustrate you.
When someone tells me they just want a cheap one to start, I always ask them to think about how they want to feel at the machine. I’d rather you start on a simple, honest machine you can grow with than a disposable one that makes you want to stop.
Part 02What to look for in a beginner sewing machine
You don’t need a machine with two hundred stitches. Most of those you’ll never use. What makes a good beginner machine is that it does the everyday things reliably — and here is what that actually means.
Five things that make a good beginner machine
None of this is about fancy features. It’s about a machine that won’t get in your way while you learn. Does that make sense?
Part 03Mechanical or computerised — which is better for a beginner?
Both are good starting points, so this one comes down to you.
A mechanical machine uses dials to set your stitch. It’s simple and robust, with very little to go wrong, so it’s a lovely, no-fuss place to begin. In South Africa you’ll usually find a good one from around R3,000 to R4,500.
A computerised machine uses buttons and a small screen. It does more of the thinking for you, setting stitch length and width automatically, and it usually offers more stitches and an easier buttonhole. It costs a bit more, around R6,500 to R10,500, but it grows with you for longer.
“Neither is better. The right one is simply the one that fits how you want to learn.”
Part 04The best beginner sewing machines in South Africa: our honest picks
These are the machines we trust enough to put our own beginners on, and we’ll be honest with you about each one — because that’s how you’ll actually choose well. Every link goes to the machine’s page, where you’ll find the current price.
The tight-budget start — Brother JA1400 (around R3,000). Our most affordable honest machine — a real one, not a disposable. It does the basics cleanly, so it’s a fair place to begin if money is tight. But if you can stretch even a little, read the next one before you decide.
The simple, sturdy choice — Brother JK17B (around R3,700). Straightforward and tough, with almost nothing to get wrong while you find your feet. A genuinely good machine.
Our honest pick of the three — Brother GS3700 (around R4,300). This is where we’d steer you if your budget allows. It’s only a little more than the JK17B — not much of a stretch — but you get more stitches and more versatility, and that small extra is worth every cent. Because of it, you grow into this machine instead of out of it within a year. For most beginners, this is the smart-money mechanical.
The beginner-friendly computerised step up — Brother Innov-is A16 (around R8,000). If you’d rather go computerised from the start, this is the sweet spot, because the clear screen and automatic settings take the guesswork out of stitch length and tension while you learn.
The one to grow into — Brother Innov-is A150 (around R10,500), or the Brother FS60X (around R6,500). A little more capability again, for when you already know you’re going to love this and want the room to stretch.
So here’s our honest, one-line answer: among the simple machines, stretch to the GS3700 if you can; and if you’d rather start computerised, the A16 is the one. Either way, you’re buying a real machine that will keep you sewing.
When a new student asks me which one to buy, my first question is never about budget. It’s “what do you want to make first?” Because the right machine for someone sewing baby clothes is different from the right machine for someone hemming curtains, and matching the two is half the battle.
Part 05A few mistakes we see (so you can skip them)
Buying on price alone
The cheapest machine is rarely the kindest one to learn on, for all the reasons above.
Buying far more machine than you need
A top-end embroidery machine is wonderful, but it can overwhelm a complete beginner, so it ends up sitting in the box.
Buying the machine but skipping the learning
A good machine in untrained hands still feels difficult, because nobody has shown you how to thread it, set your tension, or clear a jam.
Part 06The right machine is half the story — we’ll teach you the rest
Here’s the honest truth. The machine matters, but learning to use it well matters just as much. So once you’ve chosen, here are two ways to learn with us.
You bring the willingness — we’ll bring the structure
You don’t have to work it out alone. Choose your machine, and let us guide you from your very first straight line to a finished project you’re proud of.
FAQFrequently asked questions
How much should I spend on a beginner sewing machine in South Africa?
For a good first machine, plan for roughly R3,000 to R4,500 for a simple mechanical one, or about R6,500 to R10,500 for a beginner computerised one. We’d gently steer you away from anything cheaper than that, because the bargain machines are usually the disposable ones that put people off sewing.
Is a mechanical or computerised machine better for a beginner?
Both work well, so it comes down to what suits you. A mechanical machine is simpler and very hard to get wrong. A computerised machine costs a little more but sets things like stitch length for you and grows with you for longer. Neither is the right answer — it’s the one that fits how you want to learn.
Which Brother sewing machine is best for beginners?
If we had to choose, we’d point most beginners to the Brother GS3700 for a simple mechanical machine — it’s barely more than the entry models and worth every cent — or the Brother Innov-is A16 if you’d prefer a computerised one. Both are reliable, beginner-friendly, and well supported here, because they’re real machines built to last.
Can I learn to sew on a cheap machine?
You can sew on an inexpensive real machine, yes. What we’d avoid is a disposable machine — the very cheapest, often unbranded ones — because their poor tension and skipped stitches make learning far harder than it needs to be, and that’s discouraging when you’re just starting out.
Do I need to know how to sew before buying a machine?
Not at all. You only need the willingness to start. Once you have your machine, our Beginner Programme and online course take you from threading the machine to finishing your first project, in the right order.
Still deciding?
Tell us what you’d love to make first, and we’ll help you choose the right machine for it.
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