Prøve GULL - Gratis
South Africa’s National Minimum Wage to rise to R30.23 an hour from March
The Mercury
|February 05, 2026
SOUTH Africa's National Minimum Wage (NMW) will increase to R30.23 per hour from 1 March, the Department of Employment and Labour has confirmed, offering relief to millions of low-paid workers but renewing pressure on employers to comply with the law.
The increase, implemented in terms of the National Minimum Wage Act of 2018, is set out in Schedule 1 of Government Gazette No. 54075 dated February 3, 2026. It represents an above-inflation adjustment of 5%, or R1.44 per hour, and is estimated to affect approximately 5.5 million workers across the economy.
The revised wage applies across all sectors, including farm and domestic workers, whose minimum hourly rates remain fully aligned with the national wage floor. Workers employed under the Expanded Public Works Programme (EPWP) will earn a minimum of R16.62 per hour, while learners under approved learnership agreements will receive updated allowances in line with Schedule 2 of the Act.
“The National Minimum Wage is not a guideline or a target, it is a legal floor,” said John Botha, Joint CEO Global Business Solutions, warning that employers who pay below the prescribed rate expose themselves to enforcement action, compliance orders and administrative fines.
Denne historien er fra February 05, 2026-utgaven av The Mercury.
Abonner på Magzter GOLD for å få tilgang til tusenvis av kuraterte premiumhistorier og over 9000 magasiner og aviser.
Allerede abonnent? Logg på
FLERE HISTORIER FRA The Mercury
The Mercury
Markram fires, Nortje flops: Mixed fortunes for Proteas
FOLLOWING South Africa’s 30-run loss to India in their T20 World Cup warm-up fixture yesterday, cricket writer Ongama Gcwabe highlights four key observations and one critical recommendation for the team as they head into the 2026 ICC Men’s T20 World Cup.
2 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
‘Series’ makes amends
THERE was a feast of racing action at Hollywoodbets Kenilworth yesterday, with plenty of thrilling finishes to keep punters and racing followers entertained.
3 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
Donor pressure prompts Steenhuisen to forgo re-election
OUTGOING DA leader John Steenhuisen’s decision not to contest for reelection as party leader has been attributed to pressure brought by donors who had lost confidence in his leadership.
3 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
Demonising of ICE is globalist inspired
THE worst legacy of the corrupt globalist Biden/Harris regime is the human, criminal and social catastrophe constituted by the millions of illegal aliens that were not only permitted to invade US borders but were freely transported and placed in most states.
1 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
New funding model to aid scholar transport
Ensuring provision of children’s basic right to education
4 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
DURBAN INNER-CITY: EXTERNAL INSTITUTIONAL MECHANISMS
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN IN TERMS OF SECTION 78(3)(a) OF THE MUNICIPAL SYSTEMS ACT NO. 42 OF 2000 AND SECTION 84(2) OF THE MUNICIPAL FINANCE MANAGEMENT ACT 56 OF 2003, that the eThekwini Municipality intends to provide selected services for the Durban Inner-City through a municipal entity to be established.
1 min
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
Zwane to balance development and winning at AmaZulu in Nedbank Cup
ARTHUR Zwane is a huge advocate of proper player development.
2 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
Agoa extension offers South Africa a short-term relief
SOUTH Africa's inclusion in the extension of the Africa Growth and Opportunity Act (Agoa) through to the end of December 2026 has been welcomed as an important interim reprieve, even as commentators caution that strained relations with the United States underscore the need to secure more durable and diversified trade arrangements.
2 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
MARK RUBERY CHESS
William Napier (1881-1952) made many of acute observations of his contemporaries of which a sprinkling follows:
1 mins
February 05, 2026
The Mercury
SA's private sector stabilises at start of 2026 as PMI returns to neutral
SOUTH Africa's private sector showed early Signs of stabilisation in January after a difficult end to last year, with the S&P Global South Africa Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI) returning 19 the neutral 50.0 level, indicating unchanged business conditions from December.
2 mins
February 05, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
