The Cape Town manufacturer points to local engineering, installation and support as South African producers plan for the second half of 2026.
The mid-year timing matters. Many producers use the second and third quarters to review the performance of their lines before the demand that tends to build towards the end of the calendar year. For factories that ran their existing equipment hard through the first half of 2026, this is the window in which decisions about new machines, additional capacity or replacement of ageing units are usually made. Acepak is positioning its range as a ready answer for operations that want to plan those changes now and have equipment commissioned before the busier period arrives.
What Acepak makes
Acepak specialises in end-of-line packaging machinery and turnkey systems, the equipment that handles products once they have been filled or assembled and need to be grouped, wrapped, sealed and made ready for dispatch. Its range includes automated case packers, automatic packing machines, pouch fillers, automatic shrink wrap machines, shrink wrappers, banding machines and palletising equipment. These are the machines that sit at the end of a production line, where throughput, reliability and consistent presentation of the finished pack all come together.
Because it functions as a single packaging machine supplier rather than a reseller of equipment made elsewhere, Acepak is able to supply individual machines or to integrate several units into a complete end-of-line solution. For a producer, that means the same company that designs and builds the machine is also the one that programmes it, installs it on the factory floor, and returns to maintain and service it over its working life. Acepak provides machine programming, installation, maintenance, servicing and custom integration, and it offers ongoing technical support across the life of the equipment rather than treating the sale as the end of the relationship.
Who it serves
The company works across several sectors, each with its own packaging demands. In the beverage industry, speed and the ability to handle large volumes of bottles and cans are central. In food and dairy, hygiene, gentle handling and the ability to deal with chilled or perishable products shape the equipment. In pharmaceuticals and cosmetics, accuracy, traceability and the careful treatment of small and often fragile items are the priority. Acepak builds and configures its machines around these differing requirements rather than offering a single fixed product, which is part of why custom integration features so heavily in what it does.
Its reach extends well beyond South Africa. Acepak services more than 36 countries, a span that runs from its home base through to the United Kingdom, where it maintains a local presence. For a business operating from Cape Town, that international footprint reflects a level of engineering and support capacity that producers tend to look for when they are committing to equipment expected to run for many years.
Why local build matters now
There is a wider context to the announcement. South African manufacturers have spent recent years contending with currency movement, the cost and lead times of imported equipment, and the practical difficulty of getting overseas technicians and spare parts to a factory quickly when a line goes down. Equipment from a domestic packing machine manufacturer changes that calculation. Parts, engineering drawings and the people who understand a given machine are all in the country, which can shorten the time it takes to resolve a fault and keep a line moving.
Local manufacture also tends to make customisation more straightforward. When the design and build team sits in the same country as the customer, adapting a machine to an unusual product, an awkward factory layout or a specific throughput target involves fewer barriers than working through a distant supplier. For producers whose packaging formats change over time, that flexibility has a real bearing on how long a piece of equipment stays useful.
A track record across major brands
Acepak counts a number of well known producers among the companies it has worked with, including Unilever, Danone, Kellogg’s, GSK, L’Oreal, Nandos and Tiger Brands. These are businesses that run demanding, high-volume operations and hold their suppliers to strict standards on reliability and consistency. A supplier list of that kind speaks to the company’s capacity to deliver equipment that performs in serious production environments rather than only in controlled tests.
The combination of long experience, in-house engineering and a footprint that reaches across more than three dozen countries gives Acepak a foundation that few local equipment builders can match. For a producer assessing where to place an order this year, the questions usually come down to whether a machine will keep running, how quickly support can arrive when it is needed, and whether the supplier understands the specific product being packed. Acepak’s structure, with design, assembly, testing and support all kept under its own roof, is built around answering those questions directly.
Looking ahead
As 2026 passes its midpoint, Acepak’s message to the market is a measured one. Rather than announcing a single new product, the company is encouraging producers to use the quieter middle stretch of the year to review their end-of-line equipment and to consider what locally built and locally supported machinery can offer. With offices in Cape Town, Johannesburg, Durban and the United Kingdom, and a service capability that spans installation through to long-term maintenance, the company is presenting itself as a partner for the planning that many factories are doing right now.
Producers who want to understand the full range of machines, the sectors Acepak works in, and the support that comes with its equipment can find more detail on the Acepak website at https://acepak.com/.
Media Contact
Acepak
Email: info@acepak.com
Phone: +27 21 552 5999
Website: https://acepak.com/










