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The Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 South Africa employers have been anticipating since late February is now shaping operational reality across every sector. Published for public comment in February 2026 and accompanied by the Government Notice raising the Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA) earnings threshold to R269,600. 90 effective 1 May 2026, these labour law changes 2026 South Africa touch payroll, contracts, parental leave, guaranteed-hours notices, gig-worker classification and retrenchment procedures. This employer compliance checklist South Africa guide distils the reforms into practical, function-by-function actions that GCs, HR directors, in-house counsel and SME owners can execute immediately.
Every section below includes the relevant statutory reference, a template clause or checklist where appropriate, and clear guidance on when to escalate to specialist counsel.
The Labour Law Amendment Bill proposes changes to the Labour Relations Act (LRA), the BCEA and related statutes, while the updated BCEA earnings threshold takes effect on 1 May 2026. Employers of all sizes, from multinationals with South African operations to owner-managed SMEs, are affected. The six immediate actions every employer should prioritise are:
The table below maps every critical date against the employer action it triggers, providing an at-a-glance compliance calendar for HR and legal teams managing the labour law changes 2026 South Africa reforms.
| Date | What Changes | Employer Action |
|---|---|---|
| 26–27 February 2026 | Labour Law Amendment Bill published for public comment | Begin legal review of proposed amendments; identify affected contracts and policies |
| 17 April 2026 | Government Notice published, BCEA earnings threshold set at R269,600.90 | Audit payroll bands; flag employees crossing the threshold in either direction |
| 1 May 2026 | New BCEA earnings threshold takes effect; national minimum wage adjustments apply | Update payroll systems; reissue exemption assessments; communicate changes to affected employees |
| Ongoing (2026) | Public consultation period and parliamentary process for remaining Bill provisions | Monitor Gazette for enactment dates of parental leave, guaranteed-hours and gig-worker provisions; prepare draft policies in advance |
The BCEA earnings threshold 2026 increase to R269,600.90 per annum redraws the line between employees entitled to statutory protections on working hours, overtime and rest periods, and those who are exempt. Employees earning at or below the threshold are covered by Chapters 2 and 3 of the BCEA; those earning above it lose those specific protections, though they remain subject to the LRA, unfair-dismissal rules and other BCEA provisions such as leave entitlements.
| Employee Annual Earnings | BCEA Hours/Overtime Protections | Other Protections |
|---|---|---|
| At or below R269,600.90 | Fully covered, maximum 45-hour week, overtime caps, rest-period rules, Sunday/public-holiday pay | Full LRA protections, leave entitlements, UIF |
| Above R269,600.90 | Exempt from Chapters 2 and 3 hours/overtime provisions | Still covered by LRA (unfair dismissal, organisational rights), BCEA leave, UIF |
The Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 South Africa employers must address introduces mandatory written terms for guaranteed hours, maximum hours, availability windows and notice periods for shift reporting and cancellation. Industry observers expect this provision to effectively end unregulated zero-hours contracts, requiring employers to commit to a minimum number of guaranteed hours in writing.
The Bill requires that every employment contract for a shift-based, part-time or on-call worker must specify the following in writing:
Employers may adapt the following template language for inclusion in employment contracts:
“The Employer guarantees the Employee a minimum of [X] hours of work per [week/month]. The Employee’s maximum working hours shall not exceed [Y] hours per [week/month]. The Employee shall be available for duty during the following windows: [specify days and times]. The Employer shall provide the Employee with a minimum of [Z] hours’ notice before requiring the Employee to report for a shift. In the event of shift cancellation, the Employer shall provide a minimum of [Z] hours’ notice, failing which the Employee shall be entitled to payment for [specify hours or percentage of scheduled shift].”
The parental leave South Africa 2026 reforms in the Bill expand entitlements beyond the existing framework, introducing enhanced provisions for shared-care leave, adoption leave and commissioning-parent leave, alongside adjustments to employer UIF reporting obligations.
“[Company Name] provides parental leave in accordance with the BCEA as amended. Eligible employees are entitled to [X] consecutive days of parental leave on full/partial pay, commencing on the date of birth or the date the child is placed in the employee’s care. Employees wishing to share parental leave with a co-parent must submit a joint written election to HR no fewer than [30] days before the expected commencement date. The company will process all UIF parental-benefit claims on behalf of eligible employees. Employees must notify their line manager and HR in writing at least [four weeks] prior to the anticipated commencement of leave.”
The Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 strengthens the existing presumption of employment under section 200A of the LRA, broadening its practical reach to platform and gig workers employment South Africa businesses increasingly rely upon. The likely practical effect will be that employers who engage individuals through app-based platforms, short-term project contracts or labour-broker arrangements face a lower threshold for those workers to be deemed employees, with full statutory protections, UIF obligations and unfair-dismissal coverage.
Apply the following seven factors. If the majority point toward an employment relationship, the worker should be treated as an employee regardless of contractual label:
Employers who determine that a worker meets the majority of these factors should transition the arrangement to a formal employment contract, or engage the worker through an employer-of-record (EoR) structure, to mitigate classification-dispute risk.
Employers conducting dismissals and retrenchments must comply with updated procedural requirements under the Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 South Africa employers are expected to implement alongside existing LRA provisions. The Bill reinforces fair-procedure obligations and introduces additional consultation and documentation requirements for operational-requirement dismissals.
The following 12-point employer compliance checklist South Africa teams can use organises every required action by functional area. Items flagged with an asterisk (*) should be completed by 1 May 2026.
| Entity Type | Key Reporting/Notice Required Under Amendments | Typical Employer Steps |
|---|---|---|
| Employers with shift/zero-hour staff | Must record and issue written guaranteed hours, maximum hours, availability windows and notice periods for reporting and cancelling shifts | Update contracts; reissue guaranteed-hours notices; conduct payroll post-change audit |
| Employers with professional staff earning above the threshold | Exempt from some BCEA hours/overtime provisions but still subject to LRA protections, leave entitlements and UIF | Confirm earnings band; update payroll rules; circulate internal guidance for managers |
| Platform/gig economy operators | Potential presumption of employment depending on control, duration and economic-dependence factors | Run classification audit; consider EoR or formal employment model; update terms and onboarding |
Not every compliance action requires external counsel, but certain situations carry elevated risk. The matrix below helps employers determine when to escalate.
| Risk Level | Scenario | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| Low | Updating standard employment contracts with guaranteed-hours clauses; adjusting payroll systems for threshold change | Handle internally with HR and payroll teams using template clauses above; document changes |
| Medium | Reclassifying independent contractors as employees; revising collective agreements with unions; first-time parental-leave policy drafting | Obtain a legal review of draft policies and reclassification decisions before implementation |
| High | Mass retrenchment (section 189A, 50+ employees); CCMA or Labour Court referrals; classification disputes with platform workers; union strike action or picketing | Engage specialist employment counsel immediately; do not proceed without legal sign-off |
The Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 South Africa employers face represents the most significant overhaul of employment regulation in over a decade. With the BCEA earnings threshold already in effect from 1 May 2026 and remaining provisions progressing through Parliament, the window for reactive compliance is closing. Employers who act now, auditing payroll, updating contracts, revising policies and conducting classification reviews, will be positioned to manage the transition smoothly and minimise dispute risk. Those who wait face mounting exposure to CCMA referrals, Labour Court claims and regulatory enforcement action.
For organisations requiring a bespoke compliance audit or tailored contract templates, engaging specialist South African employment counsel through Global Law Experts ensures access to practitioners who can navigate these reforms with precision and local insight.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Esethu Nyombo at SGA Law Africa, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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