A source in North Pyongan province said Tuesday that trade-linked organizations in Sinuiju have been steadily increasing imports of vehicle parts, including tires, hydraulic pistons, and engine piston rings, to meet growing repair demand. The flow of Chinese-manufactured used vehicles into North Korea has left the domestic fleet heavily aged, producing frequent breakdowns and a brisk market for repair services and spare parts.
Repair work now encompasses welding, component grinding and fabrication, bodywork, painting, and engine overhaul. While some demand for vehicle repair has always existed, tied to state enterprise fleets and privately operated freight vehicles, the sheer volume of used cars now in circulation has pushed the sector to a level of activity not seen before, the source said.
Repair alleys take shape as a new commercial sector
A distinctive feature of the boom is the emergence of clustered repair districts. In Nammin neighborhood, Sinuiju, a strip once home to a handful of welding shops and parts dealers has, since last year, attracted enough additional mechanics, bodywork specialists, and parts traders to constitute a recognizable commercial zone. The source said businesses in the area have also begun taking on apprentices to handle the volume of work.
“What used to be one or two family-run welding shops or parts stalls has grown into a stretch almost entirely dedicated to vehicle repair and parts sales,” the source said. “Lately, more and more places are even taking on trainees.”
The trend is not confined to Sinuiju. Across the country, businesses that previously focused on bicycle and motorcycle repair are expanding into vehicle servicing, and some are adding parts brokerage to their operations to grow their revenue base.
A key competitive advantage in the current market is the ability to salvage and rebuild used components. Because new parts are difficult to obtain reliably, mechanics who can grind down worn parts, remanufacture components from salvaged materials, or assemble functioning units from multiple discarded vehicles are in high demand. The source said this kind of resourcefulness has become a recognized skill in the trade.
The source predicted the sector’s growth would continue. “Used vehicles keep coming in, and the older they get, the more repair and parts work they generate,” the source said. “This trend looks set to continue for the foreseeable future.”
Reporting from inside North Korea
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May 20, 2026 at 01:49AM
by DailyNK(North Korean Media)
