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Companies Act amendments South Africa 2026

Companies Act Amendments 2026, What South African Directors & Companies Must Do Now

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Last updated: 4 May 2026

The Companies Act amendments South Africa 2026 landscape is defined by two watershed statutes, the Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 and the Companies Amendment Act 17 of 2024, both signed into law in mid-2024 and now being commenced in stages by presidential proclamation. Together, these Acts reshape director liability standards, introduce mandatory remuneration-disclosure obligations, tighten the rules around financial assistance and solvency testing, and recalibrate the takeover and insolvency frameworks under the Companies Act 71 of 2008. For directors, company secretaries, CFOs and SME owners, the practical question is no longer what Parliament changed but what your board must do right now, and this guide delivers a step-by-step compliance checklist, implementation timeline and actionable templates to answer exactly that.

What to Do in the Next 30 / 90 / 180 Days

  • Within 30 days: Convene a board meeting to table the amendment texts; confirm which provisions are already in force; mandate a gap analysis of your Memorandum of Incorporation (MOI) and board charter.
  • Within 90 days: Draft or update your remuneration policy and remuneration report; review directors-and-officers (D&O) insurance limits and indemnity clauses; schedule AGM agenda items for shareholder approvals.
  • Within 180 days: Publish all required disclosures; update financial-assistance controls and solvency-test procedures; implement ongoing monitoring for new proclamation notices on the remaining uncommenced sections.

1. What Changed, Snapshot of the High-Impact Companies Act Amendments South Africa 2026

The Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (the dtic) formally welcomed the proclamation of both Companies Amendment Acts, confirming that South Africa’s corporate governance framework is undergoing its most significant overhaul since the original Companies Act 71 of 2008 took effect. The amendments address four broad areas that every company, from JSE-listed corporates to owner-managed private companies, must assess.

  • Director liability windows. The Companies Amendment Act 17 of 2024 sharpens the standard of conduct expected of directors, expands the grounds on which directors can face personal liability, and introduces clearer rules for the delinquency regime. Industry observers expect enforcement activity to increase as the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC) aligns its processes with the new provisions.
  • Remuneration disclosure. The Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 codifies the obligation for certain companies to adopt a remuneration policy (subject to shareholder approval on a regular cycle) and to publish an annual remuneration report. This brings South Africa closer to international King IV and JSE Listings Requirements practice, but now with statutory force.
  • Financial assistance and solvency tests. Amendments to the financial-assistance provisions (including changes relevant to section 45 of the principal Act) tighten the board-approval and solvency-and-liquidity-test requirements that must be satisfied before a company may provide financial assistance to related or interrelated persons.
  • Takeover and insolvency interaction. The 2026 changes clarify how the Takeover Regulation Panel’s jurisdiction interacts with business-rescue and insolvency proceedings, creating new pre-deal disclosure and approval requirements for affected transactions.

2. Directors’ Duties and Liability, What Is New and How to Mitigate Risk

Directors’ liability in South Africa in 2026 is a compliance priority that no board member can afford to overlook. The amendments reinforce the fiduciary duties already codified in sections 75 to 77 of the Companies Act while introducing additional grounds for personal accountability and streamlining the process for declaring directors delinquent.

2.1 Expanded Duties and Standard of Conduct

The Companies Amendment Act 17 of 2024 refines the standard-of-conduct provisions to make clear that directors must exercise their powers and perform their functions in good faith, for a proper purpose, and with the degree of care, skill and diligence that may reasonably be expected of a person carrying out the same functions and having the general knowledge, skill and experience of that director. The practical effect is that the “subjective overlay”, which considers the individual director’s own qualifications, is now more explicitly embedded in the statutory text, reducing room for directors to claim ignorance of financial or governance matters relevant to their specific role.

The amendments also tighten the provisions relating to conflicts of interest and the duty to disclose personal financial interests. Boards should expect a lower threshold for what constitutes a disclosable interest and greater procedural formality around recusals and the recording of conflicted decisions.

2.2 Practical Governance Steps, Board Minutes, Conflict Registers and Decision Records

Boards that act now to formalise their decision-making procedures will build the strongest defence against future liability claims. The following steps are recommended:

  • Minute every material decision. Record the information considered, the alternatives evaluated and the reasons for the board’s chosen course of action. Template language: “The board, having considered the memorandum dated [date], the solvency and liquidity test prepared by the CFO and independent legal advice from [adviser], RESOLVED that…”
  • Maintain a conflicts register. Update the register at the start of every board meeting and whenever a director acquires a new personal financial interest.
  • Circulate board packs in advance. Ensure a clear paper trail proving that directors had adequate time and information to apply the standard of care expected under the amended provisions.
  • Adopt a delegation framework. Where the board delegates to a committee or an individual director, record the scope of delegation and reporting obligations explicitly.

2.3 D&O Insurance and Indemnities, Limits and Practical Clauses

The amendments confirm that a company may indemnify a director only to the extent permitted by section 78 of the Companies Act as amended, meaning no indemnity is available for liability arising from wilful misconduct or wilful breach of trust. Directors should take the following actions:

  • Review D&O policy limits. Confirm that cover reflects the expanded liability exposure, particularly for directors serving on subsidiary or investee-company boards.
  • Check run-off provisions. Directors who resign or are removed should ensure run-off cover extends long enough to capture claims arising from decisions made while in office.
  • Align indemnity clauses with the Act. Any indemnity clause in the MOI or a director’s service agreement that exceeds the statutory limits is void. Boards should obtain a legal opinion confirming the validity of their current indemnity wording.

2.4 Sample Board Resolution, Acknowledging the Amendments

Boards may adapt the following template as a record of their initial compliance assessment:

  • “IT IS RESOLVED THAT the board has noted the commencement of certain provisions of the Companies Amendment Acts 16 and 17 of 2024;
  • the company secretary is mandated to prepare a gap analysis of the company’s MOI, board charter, conflict-of-interest policy and financial-assistance controls against the new requirements;
  • the gap analysis shall be tabled at the next scheduled board meeting, together with a recommended action plan and timeline for full compliance.”

3. Remuneration and Disclosure, Who Must Disclose, What to Publish and When

The disclosure of directors’ remuneration in South Africa now carries statutory weight beyond the JSE Listings Requirements and King IV recommendations. The Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 introduces a formal two-tier obligation: companies caught within the scope must adopt a remuneration policy and must publish an annual remuneration report.

3.1 Which Entities Are Captured

The amendments apply differently depending on company type and size. The table below summarises the likely practical effect based on the categories established in the amendment text and commentary from leading South African firms:

Company type Remuneration policy required? Annual remuneration report required? Shareholder approval at AGM?
Public company (JSE-listed) Yes, mandatory Yes, mandatory Yes, non-binding advisory vote (with prescribed escalation if >25 % vote against)
Public company (unlisted) Yes, mandatory Yes, mandatory Yes, same advisory vote
State-owned company Yes, mandatory Yes, mandatory Subject to shareholder compact / applicable legislation
Large private company (meeting prescribed thresholds) Subject to proclamation and thresholds, check latest government gazette Subject to proclamation Depends on MOI provisions
Small / owner-managed private company Not currently required, but good governance practice Not currently required N/A unless MOI provides otherwise

3.2 What Must the Remuneration Policy Contain?

The policy must set out the company’s approach to remunerating directors and prescribed officers, including the mix of fixed and variable components, performance metrics, benchmarking methodology and any provisions for sign-on, retention or severance payments. Industry observers expect the CIPC to issue further regulations prescribing minimum content, boards should monitor the government gazette accordingly.

3.3 What Must the Annual Remuneration Report Include?

The report must disclose the actual remuneration and benefits awarded to each individual director and prescribed officer during the financial year, demonstrating how the outcomes align with the approved policy. This includes base salary, bonuses, share-based incentives, retirement-fund contributions, fringe benefits and any payments on termination.

3.4 AGM Approval and the “25 % Dissent” Mechanism

The amendments introduce a mechanism under which, if 25 per cent or more of the voting rights exercised at an AGM are cast against the remuneration policy or remuneration report, the company must engage with dissenting shareholders and disclose the nature and outcome of that engagement. This codifies a practice already required by the JSE Listings Requirements for listed entities but now extends it to all public companies.

3.5 Practical Disclosure Checklist

  • Draft or update your remuneration policy. Ensure it covers every element prescribed by the amendments.
  • Prepare the annual remuneration report. Use the financial year-end as the reporting date.
  • Include both documents in the annual report. Where the company maintains a website, publish them there as well.
  • Add the advisory vote to the AGM notice. Draft a shareholder resolution: “RESOLVED, as a non-binding advisory vote, that the company’s remuneration policy / remuneration report as set out on pages [x–y] of the annual report be and is hereby endorsed.”
  • Plan for dissent. If the 25 % threshold is reached, document the engagement process and its outcome before the next AGM.

4. Companies Act Implementation Dates, What Is in Force Now vs Later

One of the most common compliance errors is assuming that every provision of a newly promulgated Act is immediately in force. Both Companies Amendment Acts were assented to on 30 July 2024, but their provisions are being commenced in stages by presidential proclamation in the government gazette, as confirmed by the dtic. The table below captures the implementation dates that directors and companies must track.

Amendment / Section Effective / Commencement Date Immediate Action (Directors & Companies)
Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024, remuneration disclosure (policy & report) Staged commencement, certain sections proclaimed effective during 2025–2026 (verify the latest proclamation in the government gazette and on gov.za) Prepare remuneration policy; schedule shareholder-approval cycle; publish remuneration report in annual report and on website; update AGM agenda
Companies Amendment Act 17 of 2024, directors’ liability and delinquency provisions Staged commencement, key director-duty provisions commenced in 2025/2026 (verify on gov.za) Conduct liability gap analysis; formalise board decision records; review D&O and indemnity coverage
Financial-assistance provisions (section 45 interaction) Subject to proclamation, check latest government gazette CFO to update solvency-and-liquidity-test controls; pre-approve significant assistance via board-minute templates
Takeover and business-rescue interaction provisions Subject to proclamation, check latest government gazette M&A teams to update pre-deal due-diligence checklists; target-company boards to review affected-transaction triggers
Remaining uncommenced provisions (various) Awaiting future proclamation Subscribe to government gazette alerts; add “amendments tracker” item to every board meeting agenda

4.1 How to Track New Commencement Notices

Boards and company secretaries should establish a systematic monitoring process rather than relying on ad-hoc alerts. Practical steps include:

  • Subscribe to the government gazette via the Government Printing Works website for automatic notification of new proclamations.
  • Monitor the dtic website for policy updates and implementation guidance notes.
  • Add a standing agenda item to every board or governance-committee meeting: “Companies Amendment Acts, commencement tracker update.”
  • Engage external counsel to provide quarterly legislative update memoranda covering all new proclamations and regulations.

5. Takeover Rules South Africa 2026, Insolvency Interaction and M&A Impact

The Companies Act amendments South Africa 2026 bring material changes to the way the Takeover Regulation Panel exercises jurisdiction, particularly where a target company is simultaneously subject to business-rescue proceedings or is financially distressed. The likely practical effect will be that acquirers and target boards must undertake more extensive pre-deal diligence and obtain additional approvals before proceeding with affected transactions.

Key Changes and Practical Implications

  • Expanded definition of “affected transaction.” The amendments broaden the types of transactions falling within the Panel’s jurisdiction, capturing certain schemes of arrangement and disposals that previously fell outside the takeover regime.
  • Insolvency and business-rescue interface. Where a target company is in business rescue, the amendments clarify the respective roles of the business-rescue practitioner and the Panel, reducing the jurisdictional uncertainty that has complicated several high-profile transactions in recent years.
  • Mandatory pre-deal board approvals. Target-company boards must now issue a formal opinion on the fairness and reasonableness of an offer at an earlier stage, supported by an independent expert report where prescribed.
  • Disclosure in offer documents. Acquirers must disclose additional information about funding sources, conditions precedent and post-acquisition intentions, in line with internationally benchmarked standards.

Pre-deal checklist for acquirers and target boards:

  • Confirm whether the transaction constitutes an “affected transaction” under the amended definitions.
  • Check whether the target is financially distressed or subject to business-rescue proceedings.
  • Engage the Panel early for rulings on jurisdictional questions.
  • Update offer-document templates to include the additional disclosure items.
  • Budget for independent fairness-opinion costs at the outset.

6. Companies Act Compliance Checklist 2026, 30 / 90 / 180-Day Action Plan

The following role-based checklist distils the obligations discussed above into practical steps that boards can allocate immediately. Every director and officer should identify their responsibilities and confirm completion dates.

Board Chair

  • Convene a dedicated board meeting within 30 days to table the amendment texts and gap analysis.
  • Approve a compliance project plan with 90-day and 180-day milestones.
  • Ensure the AGM notice includes the new remuneration-policy and remuneration-report advisory vote resolutions.

Company Secretary

  • Conduct a gap analysis of the MOI, board charter and governance policies against the amendments.
  • Update the conflicts-of-interest register template and board-pack cover sheet.
  • Establish a commencement-notice tracking system (government gazette subscription, quarterly legal updates).

CFO

  • Review and update solvency-and-liquidity-test procedures for financial-assistance decisions.
  • Prepare the annual remuneration report for inclusion in the next set of financial statements.
  • Coordinate with auditors on any changed disclosure requirements.

General Counsel

  • Review D&O insurance policy limits, exclusions and run-off provisions.
  • Audit all indemnity clauses in director service agreements and the MOI for compliance with section 78 as amended.
  • Prepare a legal opinion on any outstanding financial-assistance arrangements.

Private Company Owner / SME Director

  • Determine which provisions apply to your company type (see the entity-type table in Section 3 above).
  • Formalise board-meeting procedures, even where meetings have historically been informal.
  • Seek external counsel for any planned related-party transactions or financial assistance.

7. SME and Private Company Considerations, Practical Shortcuts

Not every provision of the Companies Act amendments South Africa 2026 hits SMEs and private companies with the same force as it does JSE-listed corporates. However, the director-liability and standard-of-conduct provisions apply across all company types registered under the Companies Act 71 of 2008. Private-company directors who have historically operated with lighter governance structures must now reassess their exposure.

Proportional Safeguards for Smaller Companies

  • Simple minute templates. SMEs do not need elaborate governance frameworks. A one-page board-minute template that captures the decision, the information considered and the attendees is sufficient to evidence compliance with the duty of care.
  • Annual governance review. Instead of a full board evaluation, private-company directors should conduct an annual self-assessment: Are conflicts disclosed? Are solvency tests performed before every financial-assistance decision? Are minutes up to date?
  • Threshold awareness. Private companies must monitor whether they cross the prescribed thresholds (public-interest score or turnover/asset thresholds) that would trigger additional compliance obligations such as mandatory audit or remuneration disclosure.
  • External counsel on material transactions. Where the company plans to provide financial assistance, enter a related-party transaction or undergo a change of control, obtaining a short external legal opinion is the most cost-effective risk-mitigation step available.

The key message for SME directors is straightforward: the amendments do not demand gold-plated governance, but they do demand documented governance. Boards that keep clear records, run solvency tests and disclose conflicts will be well positioned to demonstrate compliance if challenged.

Conclusion

The Companies Act amendments South Africa 2026 represent the most significant update to the corporate-governance framework in nearly two decades. Directors face expanded personal liability, companies must meet new remuneration-disclosure obligations, and M&A transactions attract tighter regulatory scrutiny. The staged commencement of the Companies Amendment Acts 16 and 17 of 2024 means that the compliance window is open now, and boards that delay risk falling foul of provisions that are already in force. Use the 30 / 90 / 180-day checklist above to assign responsibilities, track milestones and close governance gaps before your next AGM.

For a tailored compliance review, find a South African company lawyer through the Global Law Experts directory and filter by Country: South Africa and Practice Area: Company.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Francois Pienaar at FDP Law – Francois Pienaar Attorneys Inc, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. South African Government, Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024
  2. South African Government, Companies Amendment Bill / Act 17
  3. dtic, Proclamation of Companies Amendment Acts
  4. DLA Piper, Proposed Amendments to South African Companies Act
  5. Bowmans, Positive Developments on Proposed Amendments
  6. RSM South Africa, Amendment to the Company Act
  7. Nexia SAB&T, Companies Act Amendments Pertaining to Directors
  8. Lexology, Companies Act Amendment Commentary

FAQs

What is the new Companies Act in South Africa and which sections take effect in 2026?
The “new” provisions come from the Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 and the Companies Amendment Act 17 of 2024, both assented to on 30 July 2024. Key sections covering director liability, remuneration disclosure and financial-assistance controls are being commenced in stages during 2025–2026 by presidential proclamation. Check the government gazette and the gov.za Acts pages for the latest commencement dates.
The amendments sharpen the statutory standard of care, expand personal-liability grounds and streamline the delinquency process. Directors must now demonstrate a higher level of documented diligence, disclose conflicts at lower thresholds and can face personal liability for a broader range of governance failures.
All public companies (listed and unlisted) and state-owned companies must adopt a remuneration policy and publish an annual remuneration report. Large private companies may also be captured once prescribed thresholds are proclaimed. The disclosures must be included in the annual report and, where applicable, on the company’s website.
Both Acts are being commenced in stages, not all at once. Companies should follow the implementation timeline in this guide, subscribe to government gazette alerts and add a “commencement tracker” item to every board meeting agenda.
Boards should document every material decision with full minutes, maintain updated conflicts registers, run solvency-and-liquidity tests before approving financial assistance, review D&O insurance cover and obtain external legal advice for high-risk transactions.
Small private companies are not currently required to publish remuneration policies or reports. However, they should monitor whether they cross the prescribed size thresholds that trigger additional obligations, and they must still comply with the general director-duty and liability provisions.
The amendments expand the definition of “affected transaction,” clarify the interface between the Takeover Regulation Panel and business-rescue proceedings, and require additional pre-deal disclosures. Acquirers and target boards should update due-diligence checklists and engage the Panel early on jurisdictional questions.
If 25 per cent or more of the voting rights exercised at an AGM are cast against the remuneration policy or report, the company must engage with dissenting shareholders and disclose the nature and outcome of that engagement before the next AGM.

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Companies Act Amendments 2026, What South African Directors & Companies Must Do Now

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