Our Expert in South Africa
No results available
Whether you hold a visitor visa and have received a job offer, married a South African citizen, or simply need to regularise an expired permit, the question of how to change visa status South Africa from inside the country is one of the most urgent immigration queries in 2026. The Cabinet-approved Revised White Paper on International Migration, adopted on 26 March 2026, has reshaped the policy landscape by signalling new transitional protections, tighter enforcement priorities, and a fresh emphasis on in-country regularisation pathways. At the same time, the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) has issued a series of 2026 directives that affect who may convert a visa without leaving South Africa and under what conditions waivers will be considered.
This guide walks through every route, waiver ground, procedural step, timeline, and appeal option available to individuals and employers right now.
| Key sources referenced in this guide | Access point |
|---|---|
| Immigration Act No. 13 of 2002 & Regulations | Government Gazette (official legislation) |
| DHA ePermits portal | ehome.dha.gov.za/epermit/home |
| VFS Global, DHA application tracking | visa.vfsglobal.com/zaf/en/dha/track-application |
| Revised White Paper on International Migration | DHA (Cabinet-approved 26 March 2026) |
The short answer is: it depends on your current visa category and the permit you want to move to. Under the Immigration Act No. 13 of 2002, certain in-country visa conversions are explicitly permitted, spousal permits, employer-sponsored work visas in defined circumstances, and some study-to-work transitions. For other categories, particularly standard visitor visas and medical-treatment visas, the default rule remains that you must leave South Africa and apply from your country of origin or a South African mission abroad.
The Revised White Paper approved on 26 March 2026, however, has introduced a stronger policy mandate for DHA to process regularisation applications domestically where compelling grounds exist. Early indications suggest that this policy shift is already influencing how adjudicators treat waiver requests, particularly those grounded in humanitarian circumstances or employer necessity. The practical effect is that even categories historically excluded from in-country conversion now have a narrow, but real, waiver pathway.
Immediate action steps:
The statutory foundation for any change of status South Africa remains the Immigration Act No. 13 of 2002, read together with the Immigration Regulations. Section 10 sets out the general rule: a foreign national who wishes to change the purpose of their stay must ordinarily apply for the appropriate visa before entering South Africa or, if already in the country, through a process sanctioned by the Act and its Regulations. Sections 11(2) and 11(6) create the procedural architecture for applications made within the Republic, while Section 32 empowers the Director-General to grant waivers in specified circumstances.
The Revised White Paper on International Migration, approved by Cabinet on 26 March 2026, is a policy instrument, it does not amend the Act directly, but it sets the strategic direction that DHA officials and adjudicators follow when exercising discretion. Industry observers expect the White Paper’s emphasis on skills-based migration and humanitarian protection to translate into a more structured approach to in-country conversions, especially for critical-skills holders and applicants with strong ties to South Africa.
Alongside the White Paper, DHA has released a series of 2026 operational directives addressing transitional protections for applicants caught between the old and new policy frameworks, updated fee schedules on the ePermits system, and heightened enforcement against employers who allow foreign nationals to work outside the terms of their permits. Together, these instruments create the current regulatory environment in which any application to change visa status South Africa must be assessed.
Not every visa holder may apply for a different permit category from inside South Africa. The table below summarises the current position as of June 2026, drawing on the Immigration Act and the most recent DHA directives.
| Visa category | Change of status in-country allowed? | Practical notes |
|---|---|---|
| Visitor / Tourist visa | Generally NO | Only via narrow waivers (compelling humanitarian or employer-necessity grounds). Applicants normally must exit South Africa and apply from abroad. |
| Spousal / Life-partner visa | YES (in most cases) | Permitted where the relationship is bona fide and adequately evidenced, marriage certificate, joint affidavits, cohabitation proof, and shared financial records. |
| Employer-sponsored work visa (general work, critical skills, intra-company transfer) | YES (subject to permit-specific rules) | Labour-market checks or exemptions may apply. An employer letter, employment contract, and proof of qualifications are essential. Intra-company transfers under Section 19(6) follow a streamlined process. |
| Study visa → Work visa | CONDITIONAL | Permitted in defined circumstances, typically where the student has completed studies and secured employer sponsorship with DHA approval before the study visa lapses. |
| Medical-treatment visa | Generally NO | In-country change is rare and typically accepted only where an administrative error by DHA itself is the cause. A waiver is theoretically possible but seldom granted. |
| Permanent residence (Section 26 or 27) | YES (application pathway exists) | Holders of valid temporary residence visas may apply for permanent residence from inside South Africa under the qualifying categories in Sections 26 and 27 of the Act. |
The critical distinction to understand is that a change from visitor to work visa South Africa is the scenario most likely to be refused absent a waiver, while spousal and employer-sponsored conversions are routinely processed in-country provided the documentation is complete. Anyone contemplating a change that falls outside the explicitly permitted categories should explore the waiver route before making any application.
Where the Act does not permit an in-country change for your visa category, a waiver application under Section 32 may be the only alternative to leaving South Africa and re-applying. Waivers are discretionary, DHA is not obliged to grant them, but well-prepared applications with strong evidence succeed regularly in practice.
The grounds on which DHA considers a visa waiver application generally fall into three categories:
The waiver narrative is the centrepiece of any application. It must be a written submission, typically a covering letter or affidavit, that sets out the factual background, identifies the specific legislative provision being invoked, explains why the applicant’s circumstances are exceptional, and details the prejudice that would result if the waiver were refused. Adjudicators respond to specificity: dates, names, medical reports with prognosis, employment contracts with start dates, and school-enrolment letters for children carry far more weight than generalised claims of hardship.
The following checklist outlines the core evidence bundle for a waiver application. Applicants should tailor the list to their specific grounds:
The application procedure for an in-country visa conversion follows a defined workflow, whether you apply through the DHA ePermits portal or at a VFS Visa Application Centre.
The DHA ePermits portal at ehome.dha.gov.za/epermit/home is the starting point for most applications. Applicants create an account, select the appropriate visa category, complete the online form (Form BI-1738 or the category-specific variant), upload certified copies of supporting documents, and pay the prescribed application fee electronically. The system generates a reference number upon submission, which is essential for all subsequent tracking and correspondence.
Take care to ensure every uploaded document is clearly legible, certified within the preceding three months, and in an accepted file format. Incomplete uploads are the single most common cause of avoidable delays.
After completing the ePermit form, applicants must attend a VFS Visa Application Centre for biometric capture (fingerprints and photograph). Appointments are booked through the VFS Global platform. On the day of attendance, bring the original passport, the ePermit reference printout, proof of fee payment, and a complete set of hard-copy supporting documents. VFS captures the biometrics, collects the documents, and forwards the package to DHA for adjudication. Application tracking is available via the VFS Global tracking page or the legacy VFS Online Tracking portal.
Employer procedural note: Companies sponsoring a change visa status South Africa application should ensure that the employer support letter is signed by a director or authorised representative, references the specific vacancy and the foreign national by name and passport number, and attaches the company’s CIPC registration certificate and a brief motivation for why the position cannot be filled by a South African citizen or permanent resident.
Processing times for in-country visa conversions vary significantly depending on the visa category, the quality of the application, and DHA’s operational capacity at any given time. The table below provides realistic estimates based on practitioner-reported outcomes and DHA tracking data as of mid-2026.
| Application type | Typical processing time | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Standard change of status (spousal, work) | 3–8 months | Well-documented applications at the shorter end; complex cases or incomplete submissions at the longer end. |
| Waiver application (Section 32) | 4–9 months | Waivers require Director-General-level approval, adding to timelines. |
| Appeal / administrative review | 6–12+ months | Judicial review in the High Court may take longer depending on the court roll. |
Use either the VFS Global tracking tool or the DHA Online Tracking portal to monitor your application’s progress. You will need your VFS reference number or passport number. Status updates are not always real-time, if the portal shows no movement for an extended period, contact VFS or consult a specialist practitioner who can escalate through DHA channels.
This is one of the most frequently asked, and most misunderstood, questions. The general position is that an applicant may continue to reside in South Africa while a properly submitted application is pending, provided the application was lodged before the current visa expired. However, residence rights do not automatically equal work rights. If the applicant’s current permit does not authorise employment, they may not begin working simply because a work-visa application is pending, unless DHA issues a specific interim authorisation. Employers who allow a foreign national to work outside the scope of their permit risk significant penalties under the Immigration Act.
The safe course is to obtain written confirmation from DHA or a formal interim permit before the employee starts work.
A refused application is not the end of the road. South African immigration law provides several avenues for challenging adverse decisions, each with its own procedural requirements and timeframes.
The first step after receiving a refusal is to request written reasons from DHA. Once reasons are in hand, the applicant may pursue administrative reconsideration (asking DHA to revisit the decision on the same or supplemented evidence) or proceed to formal review. An appeal bundle should include a copy of the original application, the refusal letter with reasons, a detailed legal submission addressing the grounds of refusal, any new or supplementary evidence, and the applicant’s affidavit setting out the facts and the prejudice suffered.
Where a refusal exposes the applicant to imminent deportation or loss of livelihood, an application for urgent interim relief, typically an interdict, may be brought in the High Court. The applicant must demonstrate urgency, a prima facie right, a well-grounded apprehension of irreparable harm if relief is not granted, and that the balance of convenience favours the granting of interim protection. Immigration courts in 2026 continue to entertain such applications, though court rolls vary by province.
Litigation is expensive and outcomes are uncertain. Legal costs for a High Court review can run into tens of thousands of rands, plus counsel’s fees. Industry observers note, however, that DHA frequently settles or concedes review applications where the original refusal was clearly unreasonable, making a well-prepared record of decision and legal submission the most cost-effective investment an applicant can make.
Employers play a critical role in any in-country visa conversion that involves a work permit. The following checklist sets out the minimum actions an employer should take:
The following vignettes illustrate how the rules apply in practice. Names and details are fictionalised.
Scenario 1, Spouse on a visitor visa applying for a spousal permit. Maria entered South Africa on a visitor visa to be with her South African husband. She may apply for a change of status to a spousal visa (Section 11(6)) without leaving the country. Her application includes a certified copy of the unabridged marriage certificate, two joint affidavits from independent witnesses, three months of joint bank statements, and a lease in both names. Processing takes approximately four months. Template language for the affidavit: “I, [Name], hereby confirm that I have personally observed [Applicant] and [Spouse] living together as a married couple at [Address] since [Date]. Their relationship is, in my assessment, genuine and subsisting.”
Scenario 2, Foreign contractor on a visitor visa offered a permanent role. James is a software engineer who entered on a visitor visa for a conference and was subsequently offered a critical-skills position. Because visitor-to-work conversion is generally prohibited, James’s employer files a waiver application on employer-necessity and national-interest grounds, attaching a detailed motivation letter, the employment contract, proof that the role was advertised for four weeks with no suitable local applicants, and James’s SAQA-evaluated qualifications. The waiver is adjudicated in six months, during which James does not commence employment.
Scenario 3, Overstayed student seeking regularisation. Thabo’s study visa expired three months ago while he was completing his thesis. He applies for visa status regularisation under Section 32, citing DHA’s own processing delays as a contributing factor and attaching his university enrolment record, a letter from his supervisor confirming imminent completion, and proof that he submitted a renewal application before the original visa lapsed but received no response. The waiver narrative emphasises that departure would terminate his academic programme and that DHA’s administrative delay, not his own conduct, caused the overstay.
The regulatory environment for anyone seeking to change visa status South Africa in 2026 is more dynamic than at any point in the past decade. The Revised White Paper approved on 26 March 2026, combined with DHA’s operational directives, has expanded the practical scope of in-country conversions and waivers, but it has also intensified enforcement against non-compliance. The key to a successful outcome is preparation: assembling a complete evidence bundle, choosing the correct application pathway, and, where a waiver is needed, drafting a narrative that speaks directly to the statutory grounds. For employers, the obligation to verify status, support applications with robust documentation, and refrain from permitting unauthorised work is non-negotiable.
Whether your situation involves a straightforward spousal conversion or a complex waiver for visa status regularisation, specialist immigration counsel remains the most reliable safeguard against costly refusals and delays.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Phillip Sampson at Le Roux Sampson Inc. t/a SL Law Inc., a member of the Global Law Experts network.
posted 2 hours ago
posted 3 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 4 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 5 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 6 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
posted 7 hours ago
No results available
Find the right Legal Expert for your business
Sign up for the latest legal briefings and news within Global Law Experts’ community, as well as a whole host of features, editorial and conference updates direct to your email inbox.
Naturally you can unsubscribe at any time.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Global Law Experts is dedicated to providing exceptional legal services to clients around the world. With a vast network of highly skilled and experienced lawyers, we are committed to delivering innovative and tailored solutions to meet the diverse needs of our clients in various jurisdictions.
Send welcome message