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how to get permanent residency in south africa through marriage

How to Get Permanent Residency in South Africa Through Marriage: the 5‑year Rule, Documents, VFS Steps, Costs & Processing Time

By Global Law Experts
– posted 3 hours ago

Understanding how to get permanent residency in South Africa through marriage is the first step toward building a secure, long-term future in the country. South Africa’s Immigration Act provides a dedicated spousal pathway, most commonly under Section 26(b), that allows the foreign spouse of a South African citizen or permanent resident to apply for a permanent residence permit once the marriage has subsisted for at least five years. This guide walks through every stage of the process, from eligibility and evidentiary requirements to VFS lodgement, costs, realistic processing times and the most common refusal risks that derail otherwise strong applications.

Before diving into the detail, here is a five-point roadmap for the spousal permanent residence journey:

  • Eligibility. Confirm that your marriage or life partnership has lasted at least five years and that you can demonstrate a genuine, subsisting relationship.
  • Documents. Assemble identity records, an unabridged marriage certificate, police clearances, medical reports and evidence of your shared life.
  • VFS lodgement. Book an appointment at a VFS Global centre, pay the required fees, submit biometrics and lodge the completed application dossier.
  • Costs. Budget for government fees, VFS service charges, police clearance costs, medical examinations, translations and, where advisable, professional legal fees.
  • Processing time. Allow several months to well over a year, depending on the completeness of your application and current Department of Home Affairs (DHA) backlogs.

Eligibility and the Legal Basis: Section 26(b) vs Section 27(g)

South African immigration law offers more than one route to spousal permanent residence. The two most relevant provisions sit in the Immigration Act, 2002, Section 26(b) and Section 27(g). Choosing the correct pathway is critical because the evidentiary burden, the role of the South African spouse and the risk of refusal differ between them.

Section 26(b), the five-year spouse rule

Section 26(b) is the route most foreign spouses rely on. Under this provision, the Director-General of Home Affairs may issue a permanent residence permit to a foreigner who has been the spouse of a South African citizen or permanent resident for a continuous period of at least five years. The marriage must have been concluded at least five years before the date of application, and the applicant must demonstrate that a good-faith spousal relationship exists at the time the application is lodged. Crucially, the five-year period refers to the duration of the legal marriage, not to the number of years the applicant has physically lived in South Africa.

Industry observers expect adjudicators to scrutinise genuineness more closely when there is limited evidence of cohabitation, but the statute itself does not impose a strict in-country residency requirement for the five-year threshold.

Section 27(g), the undertaking pathway

Section 27(g) enables permanent residence where a South African citizen or permanent resident provides a written undertaking that they are able and willing to support and maintain the foreign relative. This route is sometimes used by applicants who do not yet meet the five-year marriage threshold or whose circumstances fit the broader family-member criteria. The undertaking must be accompanied by financial evidence demonstrating the sponsor’s capacity to fulfil the obligation.

Life partnerships and customary marriages

Foreign nationals in a registered life partnership or a lawful customary marriage recognised under South African law may also qualify for spousal permanent residence. The genuineness and duration of the relationship are assessed in a similar manner, although the evidentiary requirements may include proof of registration of the customary marriage or notarised life-partnership declarations.

Route / Section Key Legal Test Typical Evidence Required
Section 26(b), Spouse of SA citizen/PR (5‑year route) Marriage or permanent partnership of at least five years and a genuine relationship at the time of application. Unabridged marriage certificate, spouse SA ID, evidence of ongoing relationship (financial/household documents), police and medical clearances, DHA form BI‑947.
Section 27(g), Undertaking by citizen/PR Written undertaking by SA citizen/PR to support and maintain the foreign spouse; applicant meets Home Affairs criteria. Undertaking letter (signed), spouse SA ID, supporting financial documents and statement of intent, same clearance and medical documents as above.
Life partner / customary marriage Lawful recognition of life partnership or customary marriage under SA law; genuineness and duration tested. Proof of registration or customary marriage, cohabitation and joint-life evidence, affidavits, supporting documents similar to the spouse pathway.

Documents Checklist for Spousal Permanent Residence in South Africa

One of the most common reasons applications stall or are refused is an incomplete or poorly authenticated document set. The checklist below reflects the VFS Global requirements for Section 26(b) and Section 27(g) applications and should be read alongside the official DHA form BI‑947.

Identity and civil documents

  • Valid passport. The applicant’s passport must be valid for the duration of the application period. Include certified copies of the biographical page and any pages containing South African visas or entry stamps.
  • South African spouse’s ID. A certified copy of the South African citizen’s or permanent resident’s identity document.
  • Unabridged marriage certificate. This must be an official unabridged marriage certificate (or extract from the marriage record) issued by the relevant authority. For customary marriages, submit proof of registration under the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act.
  • Two recent passport-size photographs. These must meet DHA specifications for size and background colour.

Police clearance certificates

Applicants must provide police clearance certificates from every country in which they have resided for twelve months or longer since turning eighteen. This includes South Africa itself if the applicant is currently living in the country. Allow adequate lead time, some countries take weeks to process clearance requests, and delays here are one of the leading causes of application hold-ups.

Medical and radiological reports

A duly completed medical report and a chest X-ray (radiological report), both on prescribed DHA forms, must be submitted. The medical examination must be performed by a registered medical practitioner, and the radiological examination by a registered radiologist. Reports are typically valid for six months, so timing the medical appointment relative to the VFS lodgement date is important.

Proof of relationship and shared life

This category of evidence is where many applications are won or lost. DHA adjudicators assess whether the marriage is a genuine, subsisting relationship rather than one contracted solely for immigration purposes. Applicants should build a comprehensive evidence file that may include:

  • Joint financial records. Shared bank accounts, joint loan agreements, insurance policies naming both spouses, or evidence of financial support flowing between spouses.
  • Residential evidence. A lease or title deed in both names, utility bills at a shared address, or correspondence addressed to both spouses at the same location.
  • Communication evidence. A selection of letters, emails, messaging transcripts or call logs demonstrating regular, ongoing contact, particularly useful where spouses have spent periods apart.
  • Photographs and social proof. Dated photographs of the couple together at family events, holidays or everyday life. Wedding photographs, birth certificates of shared children and affidavits from family members or friends attesting to the relationship are also persuasive.
  • Sworn affidavits. A joint declaration by both spouses confirming the genuine nature of the marriage, accompanied by affidavits from third parties who can attest to the relationship.

Undertaking and support letter (Section 27(g))

If applying under Section 27(g), the South African citizen or permanent resident must provide a signed undertaking confirming that they are able and willing to support and maintain the foreign spouse. This undertaking should be accompanied by proof of income or financial means, recent payslips, tax returns, employment letters or bank statements, that demonstrate the sponsor’s capacity to honour the commitment.

Translations, apostilles and document authentication

All documents not in English must be accompanied by a sworn translation into English. Documents issued by foreign authorities may need to be apostilled (where the issuing country is a signatory to the Hague Apostille Convention) or authenticated through the relevant South African embassy or consulate. Failure to apostille or authenticate foreign documents is a frequent and avoidable cause of delay.

VFS and Home Affairs: Step-by-Step Lodgement and Biometrics

All applications for permanent residence are processed through VFS Global, the official outsourced partner of the Department of Home Affairs. Understanding the VFS permanent residence application requirements for South Africa, and avoiding common procedural errors, can shave weeks off the process.

  1. Pre-check and collate. Before booking an appointment, work through the VFS requirements checklist for your specific section (26(b) or 27(g)). Ensure every document is certified, translated (where necessary) and arranged in the order specified. Complete DHA form BI‑947 in full, incomplete forms are a leading cause of rejection at the counter.
  2. Book a VFS appointment. Appointments are booked online through the VFS Global South Africa portal. Availability can be limited at busy centres, so book as early as possible. Select the correct visa or permit category, permanent residence, not temporary visa.
  3. Pay fees. VFS service fees are payable at the time of the appointment. Confirm the current fee schedule on the VFS website before attending, as charges are updated periodically.
  4. Attend VFS, document verification. At the appointment, a VFS officer will verify that your documents match the checklist and that forms are correctly completed. Missing or incorrectly certified documents may result in the application being returned without lodgement.
  5. Biometrics capture. Fingerprints and a photograph are captured during the VFS appointment. This biometric data forms part of the DHA’s security and identity verification process.
  6. Lodgement with DHA. Once verified, VFS forwards the complete application dossier to the Department of Home Affairs for adjudication. The applicant receives a receipt and tracking number.
  7. Tracking and queries. Use the VFS tracking system to monitor application status. If DHA requests additional information, respond promptly, delays in providing supplementary documents extend processing times significantly.

Common VFS mistakes to avoid:

  • Submitting uncertified copies or copies certified more than six months before the appointment date.
  • Using outdated versions of the BI‑947 form.
  • Booking the wrong appointment category (e.g., temporary visa instead of permanent residence).
  • Failing to bring original documents for verification alongside certified copies.

Costs, Third-Party Fees and Realistic Processing Times

How much does permanent residency cost in South Africa? The total outlay extends well beyond the DHA application fee. Below is a representative breakdown of the cost categories applicants should budget for. Because government and VFS fees are subject to periodic revision, applicants should confirm current figures directly with VFS Global and the DHA before lodging.

Cost Category Indicative Range Notes
DHA permanent residence application fee Variable, confirm with DHA Payable to the Department of Home Affairs; fee schedules are updated periodically.
VFS service charge Variable, confirm with VFS Covers document handling, biometrics capture and courier to DHA.
Police clearance certificates Varies by country SAPS clearance for South Africa; fees for foreign clearances depend on the issuing country.
Medical and radiological reports Varies by practitioner Typically several hundred rand for the medical; additional cost for the chest X-ray.
Sworn translations Per-page rate Required for any document not in English; rates vary by language and translation service.
Apostilles / document authentication Varies by country Hague Apostille or embassy legalisation fees for foreign-issued documents.
Professional legal fees (optional but recommended) Varies by scope Immigration attorneys typically charge a fixed fee for application preparation, review and lodgement assistance.

How long does a permanent residence application take in South Africa?

Processing times are notoriously difficult to predict. Industry observers report that straightforward, complete applications submitted under Section 26(b) may be adjudicated within several months, while complex or incomplete files can remain in the DHA system for twelve months or longer. Factors that commonly extend processing time include:

  • Missing or deficient documents that trigger a request for further information.
  • Delayed police clearances from foreign jurisdictions.
  • DHA internal backlogs that fluctuate depending on staffing and application volumes.
  • Security vetting, additional background checks for applicants from certain countries or with complex travel histories.

The single most effective way to shorten processing time is to lodge a fully complete, correctly certified and well-evidenced application the first time.

Common Refusal Grounds and How to Avoid Them

Even married applicants can have a spousal permanent residence application refused. Understanding the most frequent refusal grounds, and building pre-emptive controls into the application, is essential.

  • Insufficient proof of a genuine relationship. Submitting only a marriage certificate and a few photographs is rarely enough. Build a layered evidence file covering finances, residence, communication and third-party attestations. The deeper and more diverse the evidence, the harder it is for an adjudicator to question genuineness.
  • Criminal record or security concerns. A serious criminal conviction, or an undisclosed minor conviction, can result in refusal. Disclose all convictions proactively and include rehabilitation evidence where relevant. Attempting to conceal a record that later surfaces during vetting almost always results in outright refusal and potential deportation consequences.
  • Incomplete or incorrectly certified documents. Certifications that have expired, translations by non-sworn translators, or missing apostilles are technical defects that give DHA grounds to refuse without reaching the merits.
  • Health-related grounds. Certain medical conditions identified in the prescribed medical or radiological reports may trigger further inquiry or refusal. Applicants should obtain medical reports early and seek legal advice if a condition is identified that could affect eligibility.
  • Incorrect or incomplete undertaking (Section 27(g)). Where the sponsor’s undertaking letter is vague, unsupported by financial documentation, or contradicted by other evidence in the file, the application may be refused.

Where an application is refused, the applicant has the right to appeal or to submit representations. Early engagement with a qualified immigration lawyer can significantly improve the prospects of a successful outcome on appeal, particularly where the refusal is based on an evidentiary shortcoming that can be remedied.

After PR Is Granted: Rights, Obligations and the Route to Citizenship

A permanent residence permit entitles the holder to live, work and study in South Africa indefinitely. Permanent residents enjoy most of the rights of citizens, with important exceptions: they cannot vote in national elections and they cannot hold a South African passport.

Critically, the permanent residence permit granted on the basis of marriage may lapse if the spousal relationship ends within the prescribed period after the permit is issued. If a couple divorces or separates within two years of the PR being granted, the Director-General may cancel the permit, unless the South African spouse has passed away. This lapse provision is designed to deter marriages of convenience and means that applicants must be prepared to maintain the relationship, and evidence of that relationship, beyond the date of PR approval.

Marrying a South African does not automatically confer South African citizenship. Citizenship is obtained through a separate naturalisation process, which has its own residency and eligibility requirements under the South African Citizenship Act. Proof of permanent residence in South Africa is a prerequisite for naturalisation, but it is only one of several conditions that must be satisfied.

Step-by-Step Timeline: From Marriage to Permanent Residence

Stage Approximate Timing Key Actions
Marriage concluded Day 0 Register the marriage with DHA; obtain an unabridged marriage certificate.
Hold a temporary spousal / relative visa Years 1–5 Enter and reside in South Africa on a valid temporary visa; build relationship evidence continuously.
Five-year marriage threshold reached Year 5 Confirm eligibility; begin assembling the PR application dossier.
Gather documents, clearances and medicals Months 1–3 post-threshold Obtain police clearances (all countries), medical and radiological reports, sworn translations and apostilles.
Complete form BI‑947 and collate dossier Month 3–4 Fill in every section of the DHA form; arrange documents per the VFS checklist order.
Book and attend VFS appointment Month 4–5 Book online; attend with originals and certified copies; submit biometrics; pay fees.
DHA adjudication Several months to 12+ months Track via VFS; respond promptly to any requests for further information.
PR permit issued Upon DHA approval Collect the permanent residence certificate; maintain the relationship for the prescribed post-PR period.

Printable checklist summary, key items to prepare before your VFS appointment:

  • Valid applicant passport (certified copy of bio page)
  • Certified copy of South African spouse’s ID
  • Unabridged marriage certificate (or customary marriage registration proof)
  • Completed DHA form BI‑947
  • Two passport-size photographs (DHA specification)
  • Police clearance certificates (all countries of residence since age 18)
  • Medical report on prescribed DHA form
  • Radiological (chest X-ray) report on prescribed DHA form
  • Evidence of genuine relationship (financial, residential, communication, photographs, affidavits)
  • Undertaking letter and sponsor financials (if Section 27(g))
  • Sworn translations of all non-English documents
  • Apostilles or embassy authentication for foreign-issued documents
  • VFS service fee (confirm current amount)

Conclusion

Securing spousal permanent residence in South Africa is achievable, but it requires careful preparation, thorough documentation and a clear understanding of the legal framework. The five-year marriage threshold under Section 26(b) is only the starting point, the quality and depth of the evidence supporting a genuine relationship, the completeness of police clearances and medical reports, and the accuracy of the BI‑947 form all determine whether an application succeeds or is sent back for further information.

For anyone considering how to get permanent residency in South Africa through marriage, the single most important piece of advice is to treat the application as a legal submission rather than a bureaucratic form-fill: build the strongest possible evidentiary case, follow the VFS lodgement process precisely, and seek professional guidance where the stakes, or the complexities, are high.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. South African Government, Apply for Permanent Residency Permit
  2. Department of Home Affairs, Application Form BI‑947
  3. VFS Global, Requirements for Permanent Residence Section 26(b)
  4. VFS Global, Requirements for Permanent Residence Section 27(g)
  5. South African Embassy, Permanent Residence Requirements
  6. Breytenbachs Immigration Consultants, Permanent Residence as a Spouse
  7. IBN Immigration Solutions, PR Based on Relative/Spouse
  8. Black Pen Immigration, Permanent Residence Spouse
  9. Visa4SA, Permanent Residency Immigration South Africa

FAQs

Do you automatically get citizenship if you marry a South African?
No. Marriage to a South African citizen does not automatically confer citizenship. Marriage may make you eligible for a permanent residence permit, subject to the five-year rule and other requirements, but citizenship follows a separate naturalisation process under the South African Citizenship Act.
Yes. A foreign national who has been the spouse of a South African citizen or permanent resident for at least five years may apply for permanent residence under Section 26(b) of the Immigration Act. Other routes, including Section 27(g) undertakings, may also apply depending on individual circumstances.
The core documents include a valid passport, your South African spouse’s ID, an unabridged marriage certificate, police clearance certificates from all countries of residence since age eighteen, medical and radiological reports on DHA-prescribed forms, evidence of a genuine and subsisting relationship, and the completed DHA form BI‑947. See the full documents checklist above for additional items.
Processing times vary widely. Complete and well-evidenced applications may be adjudicated within several months, while applications that require supplementary information or that are caught in DHA backlogs can take twelve months or longer. Lodging a complete dossier the first time is the most effective way to minimise delays.
Total costs include the DHA application fee, VFS service charges, police clearance fees (varying by country), medical and radiological examination costs, sworn translation fees and, where applicable, professional legal fees. Because government fees are updated periodically, applicants should confirm current amounts directly with VFS Global and the DHA before lodging.
The statute requires that the marriage has subsisted for at least five years and that a genuine relationship exists at the time of application. Physical presence in South Africa during the entire five-year period is not an express statutory requirement, but evidence of cohabitation and shared life in the country strengthens the application considerably. Applicants who have spent significant time outside South Africa should compile robust evidence of ongoing relationship genuineness.
The permanent residence permit may be cancelled if the spousal relationship ends within the prescribed post-PR period. An exception applies where the South African spouse has passed away. Applicants facing a relationship breakdown shortly after receiving PR should seek legal advice immediately to understand their options and any available procedural protections.
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How to Get Permanent Residency in South Africa Through Marriage: the 5‑year Rule, Documents, VFS Steps, Costs & Processing Time

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