Sasol Ltd (SOL.JSE) share price today in rands is R 192.00 per 1 share.
Sasol was listed on the JSE in October 1979, making it one of the longest-standing listings on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. The stock reached its all-time high of R652.99 in June 2014 before going through a prolonged decline, hitting a low of R20.77 in March 2020.
In 2026, the share has staged a strong recovery, gaining over 85% year to date driven by rising oil prices and a JPMorgan upgrade from Underweight to Overweight.
SOL.JSE
R 192.00
What is SOL.JSE
SOL.JSE is the code used on the stock market to identify Sasol shares. Think of it like a nickname investors use to find and buy Sasol shares quickly.
- SOL = Sasol Limited
- JSE = Johannesburg Stock Exchange, where the shares are traded
So when you see SOL.JSE, it simply means “Sasol shares on the JSE.”
What Does Sasol Do
Sasol is a South African energy and chemicals company. Most South Africans know Sasol from the petrol stations, but the business is much bigger than that.
Sasol is a global energy and chemicals company that harnesses sophisticated technologies and processes to operate world-scale facilities, producing and marketing a range of high-quality products worldwide. This includes petrol, diesel, jet fuel, industrial chemicals, and lubricants sold in 27 countries.
- Africa: South Africa, Mozambique, Nigeria
- North America: United States, Canada
- Europe: UK, Germany, Italy, France, Belgium, Netherlands, Spain, Poland, Slovakia, Norway
- Middle East: Qatar, UAE
- Asia: Singapore, China, Japan, South Korea, India
- South America: Brazil
- Oceania: Australia
This matters to you as a potential investor because Sasol’s share price is closely tied to the global oil price. When oil goes up, Sasol tends to go up with it.
You need to create an account with a stockbroker that offers JSE stocks, then search for Sasol or SOL, then click buy.
Here is a list of stockbrokers:
- EasyEquities
- Shfty
- BrokStock
If you are a complete beginner to investing, I recommend you start with EasyEquities as your stockbroker.
With stockbrokers like EasyEquities, anyone can buy Sasol shares; there is no minimum investment amount. Meaning that with just R10, you can still buy Sasol shares.
Step 1: Open an EasyEquities Account
Step 2: Deposit Money Into Your Account

Step 4: Place Your Order
After buying, your shares will appear in your EasyEquities portfolio immediately.
When you buy shares like Sasol (SOL.JSE), there are two main ways you can make money.
- Make Money When the Share Price Goes Up
- Make Money From Dividends
Here is a beginner’s guide to investing in South Africa
FAQs
Sasol is rising mainly because global oil prices have increased due to Middle East tensions, which directly boost Sasol’s profits. JPMorgan also upgraded the stock and raised its price target significantly, which brought in more investors, pushing the price higher.
There is no minimum with EasyEquities; you can buy fractional shares with as little as R10
Yes. But it’s rare it only happens if a company’s share price goes to R0 and gets delisted on the exchange.
Yes. You can sell your shares anytime the market is open.



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