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bcea earnings threshold south africa

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South Africa (2026): Employer Checklist, What to Do Now About the New BCEA Earnings Threshold and Labour Law Amendment Bill

By Global Law Experts
– posted 50 minutes ago

Last reviewed: 15 May 2026

From 1 May 2026, the BCEA earnings threshold in South Africa rose to R269,600.90 per annum, approximately R22,466.74 per month, following a Ministerial Determination published in the Government Gazette. This 3% adjustment directly changes which employees qualify for overtime pay, regulated working hours, meal-interval protections and several other Basic Conditions of Employment Act (BCEA) safeguards. At the same time, the draft Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026, published for public comment earlier this year, proposes significant changes to severance-pay formulas, employee definitions and fixed-term contract rules that could reshape retrenchment obligations. Employers who fail to update payroll systems, contracts and internal policies risk non-compliance claims, back-pay exposure and CCMA disputes, making an immediate compliance review essential.

At a Glance: The BCEA Earnings Threshold 2026 Numbers and Legal Effect

Exact Figures and Effective Dates

The Department of Employment and Labour confirmed the new threshold via a Determination published in the Government Gazette in April 2026, with an effective date of 1 May 2026. The table below compares the prior and current thresholds.

Metric Prior Threshold (2025) New Threshold (2026)
Annual earnings threshold R261,748.45 R269,600.90
Monthly equivalent ≈ R21,812.37 ≈ R22,466.74
Percentage increase , ≈ 3%
Effective date 1 March 2025 1 May 2026

The threshold figure of R269,600.90 per annum is drawn from the official Government Gazette Determination. Employers should note that “earnings” for threshold purposes includes salary, regular allowances and payments in kind, but excludes discretionary payments such as bonuses, gifts, gratuities and employer contributions to benefit funds.

What Being “Above the Threshold” Means

Employees who earn above the BCEA earnings threshold are excluded from several protective provisions of the Act. The key sections that no longer apply to above-threshold earners include:

  • Regulation of working time (Chapter Two), maximum ordinary hours, overtime limits and compressed working-week arrangements.
  • Overtime pay rules, the entitlement to 1.5× the normal wage rate for overtime hours worked.
  • Meal intervals, the mandatory one-hour break after five consecutive hours of work.
  • Rest periods and Sunday-work pay, prescribed daily and weekly rest periods, plus premium rates for work on Sundays and public holidays.
  • Night-work allowances, protections around transport and shift scheduling for employees who regularly work after 23:00 and before 06:00.

Crucially, above-threshold employees remain covered by the BCEA’s provisions on leave (annual, sick, family responsibility and maternity leave), notice periods for termination, prohibition of child and forced labour, and the requirement for written particulars of employment. The threshold also has knock-on effects under the Labour Relations Act (LRA) for purposes such as determining eligibility for certain protections against unfair dismissal of fixed-term contract workers.

Immediate Employer Compliance Checklist, BCEA Earnings Threshold South Africa

The following prioritised checklist addresses what employers must change immediately after the 1 May 2026 earnings-threshold increase. Each action identifies the responsible team and a recommended deadline.

  1. Run a payroll filter by annualised earnings. Extract every employee’s total annual “earnings” (as defined by the BCEA, excluding discretionary bonuses and employer benefit-fund contributions) and flag those falling between R261,748.45 and R269,600.90. Responsible: Payroll manager. Deadline: Within 7 days of 1 May 2026.
  2. Reclassify affected employees in the HRIS. For employees whose earnings have moved them from below to above the threshold (or vice versa), update their exemption status in the HR information system. Responsible: HR administrator. Deadline: Concurrent with payroll filter.
  3. Update overtime and roster rules. Employees who now fall below the threshold must immediately become eligible for overtime pay at 1.5× the normal rate and must be rostered within the BCEA’s working-time limits. Employees who have moved above the threshold may be transitioned to new working-time arrangements, subject to contractual terms. Responsible: Line managers and HR. Deadline: Before the next pay run.
  4. Revise employment contracts. Amend or issue addenda to contracts for all employees whose threshold status has changed. Insert or update clauses on overtime exemption, working hours, standby duties and call-out compensation. Responsible: In-house legal / HR. Deadline: Within 30 days.
  5. Update job offers and remuneration letters. Ensure all pending offers of employment and new appointment letters reference the correct threshold and accurately state whether the role is above or below it. Responsible: Talent acquisition / HR. Deadline: Immediate.
  6. Review fixed-term and contractor arrangements. Under the LRA, employees on fixed-term contracts earning below the threshold enjoy additional protections against unfair treatment relative to permanent staff. Re-assess the status and justification of all fixed-term contracts in light of the adjusted figure. Responsible: HR / Legal. Deadline: Within 30 days.
  7. Check COIDA and benefits ties. The BCEA earnings threshold is referenced or mirrored by other statutes. Verify whether the Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act (COIDA) earnings ceiling and UIF contribution caps require corresponding payroll adjustments. Responsible: Payroll / Finance. Deadline: Within 14 days.
  8. Adjust payroll software parameters. Update the threshold limit in your payroll system and confirm rounding logic matches the Gazette figure of R269,600.90 (not a rounded figure). Run a parallel test payroll before the live run. Responsible: Payroll / IT. Deadline: Before next pay cycle.
  9. Notify affected employees in writing. Issue a clear, factual communication to each employee whose status has changed, explaining what protections now apply or no longer apply and offering a consultation window. Responsible: HR business partner. Deadline: Within 14 days.
  10. Update internal policies. Revise overtime policies, leave policies and working-time policies in the staff handbook to reflect the new threshold figure and its practical implications. Responsible: HR policy owner. Deadline: Within 30 days.
  11. Check collective agreements. Where a bargaining council agreement or collective agreement references the BCEA threshold or incorporates its protections, confirm that the agreement does not create additional obligations beyond the statutory change. Responsible: Employee-relations manager. Deadline: Within 30 days.
  12. Document all decisions. Record the rationale for every classification decision, contract amendment and policy change. Store payroll filter outputs, amended contracts and employee acknowledgments in a central compliance file. Responsible: HR / Legal. Deadline: Ongoing, complete initial file within 30 days.

Quick Payroll Filter Template

For payroll teams using spreadsheet-based systems, the following Excel formula flags employees whose annualised BCEA earnings fall in the critical band:

=IF(AND(AnnualEarnings>=261748.45, AnnualEarnings<=269600.90), "REVIEW, threshold change", "No action")

Replace AnnualEarnings with the relevant cell reference. This identifies employees who have crossed the boundary and require reclassification under the BCEA threshold 2026.

Contracts, Policies and Job Descriptions, Wording and Examples

Contract Clause Examples to Add or Adjust

When an employee’s status changes because of the updated BCEA earnings threshold in South Africa, the employment contract must reflect the new position clearly. Below are template clauses that employers can adapt.

Overtime exemption clause (above-threshold employee):

“The Employee’s annual remuneration exceeds the earnings threshold prescribed under section 6(3) of the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997, as determined by the Minister from time to time. Accordingly, the provisions of Chapter Two of the BCEA (regulation of working time) do not apply to the Employee’s employment. The Employee acknowledges that overtime pay at the statutory rate is not applicable, and that any additional hours worked form part of the Employee’s standard obligations under this contract.”

Working-hours clause (below-threshold employee):

“The Employee’s ordinary hours of work shall not exceed [45/40] hours per week. Any work performed in excess of ordinary hours constitutes overtime, which shall be compensated at 1.5 times the Employee’s normal hourly rate in accordance with section 10 of the BCEA, unless an alternative arrangement is agreed in writing.”

Change-management clause (threshold-linked):

“Should the Employee’s earnings cross the BCEA earnings threshold (whether by salary adjustment, threshold amendment or restructuring), the parties agree to meet within 14 days of such change to discuss and, where necessary, amend the terms of this contract to reflect the applicable BCEA protections or exemptions.”

Staff Handbook and Policy Update Checklist

Employers should treat every threshold adjustment as a trigger for a policy-review cycle. The following steps apply:

  • Identify all policies referencing the BCEA threshold, typically overtime, working time, standby, call-out, leave and on-call policies.
  • Update the threshold figure in each document from R261,748.45 to R269,600.90.
  • Circulate drafts to the HR director, legal department and (where applicable) employee representatives or union officials for sign-off.
  • Publish and acknowledge, distribute updated policies electronically, require employee sign-off and file acknowledgments.
  • Set a calendar reminder for the next anticipated threshold review (typically annually).

Who is covered by the new BCEA earnings threshold? Every employee whose total annual BCEA earnings (salary plus regular allowances minus excluded items) falls at or below R269,600.90 is entitled to the full suite of Chapter Two protections. Employees above that figure are exempt from working-time regulation but retain all other BCEA rights.

Retrenchment, Severance and the Draft Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026, What to Prepare Now

Status of the Labour Law Amendment Bill

The draft Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 was published for public comment earlier in 2026. At the time of writing, the Bill remains in draft form and has not yet been enacted into law. Its provisions may change materially during the parliamentary process. Employers should monitor progress closely but begin preparatory steps now, given the potential scale of impact on retrenchment severance pay in South Africa.

Key Proposed Changes Affecting Employers

Based on the published draft, the following proposals are most significant for employer compliance planning:

  • Enhanced severance-pay formula. The draft Bill proposes increasing the minimum severance pay payable on retrenchment beyond the current statutory floor of one week’s remuneration per completed year of service under section 41(2) of the BCEA. Industry observers expect the likely practical effect to be a meaningful increase in per-employee retrenchment costs.
  • Broadened employee definition. The draft proposes expanding the definition of “employee” to capture certain categories of workers currently classified as independent contractors, which could bring additional individuals under both BCEA and LRA protection.
  • Tighter regulation of fixed-term contracts. Additional restrictions on the duration and renewal of fixed-term contracts are proposed, particularly for employees earning below the BCEA earnings threshold.
  • Revised consultation and notice obligations. The draft suggests lengthened consultation periods for large-scale retrenchments and additional disclosure requirements during section 189 and 189A processes.

Important: All of the above are draft proposals. They have not been enacted and may be amended or withdrawn during parliamentary deliberation. Employers should not treat them as current law but should prepare for their possible implementation.

Practical Checklist for Retrenchment Planning Now

Employers considering or anticipating operational restructuring should take the following preparatory steps:

  • Audit current severance provisions. Calculate severance exposure under the existing formula (one week’s remuneration × completed years of service) for all potentially affected roles.
  • Model the proposed formula. Run a parallel calculation using the enhanced formula outlined in the draft Bill to estimate increased liability. Label this clearly as illustrative.
  • Review contractor classifications. Identify all independent contractors whose working arrangements may meet the broadened “employee” definition proposed in the Bill. Prepare contingency plans for reclassification.
  • Update section 189/189A templates. Pre-prepare consultation notices, disclosure packs and meeting schedules that accommodate potentially longer consultation windows.
  • Document operational rationale thoroughly. Ensure that any retrenchment is supported by a clear, contemporaneous business case, this protects against unfair-dismissal challenges regardless of the Bill’s outcome.

Illustrative severance calculation (current law): An employee with 8 completed years of service earning R20,000 per month (R4,615.38 per week) would be entitled to a minimum severance payment of 8 × R4,615.38 = R36,923.04. Under the draft Bill’s proposed enhanced formula, the amount could increase, employers should model scenarios once the final text is available.

Statutory Payments: UIF, National Minimum Wage and Payroll Steps for 2026

National Minimum Wage 2026

The national minimum wage increased to R30.23 per hour with effect from 1 March 2026, following the Minister’s announcement in February 2026. This represents an approximately 5% increase from the 2025 rate of R28.79 per hour. While the NMW applies to all workers regardless of the BCEA earnings threshold, employers should ensure their pay-banding structures are consistent. An employee earning at or just above the national minimum wage 2026 rate will almost certainly fall below the BCEA threshold, meaning full Chapter Two protections apply.

UIF Contributions and Deductions

Employers must continue to deduct and contribute UIF at the prescribed rate of 1% of the employee’s remuneration (matched by a 1% employer contribution), subject to the UIF contribution ceiling. Payroll teams should confirm that their systems correctly apply the ceiling and that monthly UIF submissions to the Unemployment Insurance Fund reflect any earnings changes resulting from salary adjustments or threshold reclassifications. Any UIF amendments for 2026 should be verified against official Department of Employment and Labour guidance.

A practical payroll-run checklist for 2026 statutory payments includes:

  • Confirm NMW rate of R30.23/hr is applied from 1 March 2026 onwards.
  • Verify UIF deduction ceiling is current in payroll software.
  • Reconcile BCEA threshold reclassifications with UIF and COIDA reporting.
  • File monthly UIF declarations on time to avoid penalties.

Risk Management, Record-Keeping and Enforcement Exposure

Likely Dispute Types and Enforcement Risks

Failure to respond promptly to the BCEA earnings threshold change exposes employers to several categories of dispute:

  • Unpaid overtime claims. An employee incorrectly classified as above-threshold may lodge a complaint with the Department of Employment and Labour or refer a dispute to the CCMA for unpaid overtime, including retrospective claims.
  • Misclassification disputes. Disagreements over whether an employee’s “earnings” genuinely exceed the threshold, particularly where allowances, commissions or variable pay are involved, can trigger costly arbitration proceedings.
  • Retrenchment challenges. Procedural errors during section 189 processes, compounded by uncertainty around the draft Bill’s requirements, increase the risk of automatically unfair or substantively unfair dismissal findings.

Records to Keep

Employers should maintain the following records and retain them for a minimum of three years (or longer where disputes are pending):

  • Payroll filter outputs and threshold-classification reports (dated).
  • Amended employment contracts and employee acknowledgment forms.
  • Updated policy documents with version-control dates.
  • Consultation minutes and correspondence with affected employees.
  • HRIS export snapshots taken before and after the threshold change.

Dispute-Avoidance and ADR, How to Reduce Litigation Risk

Practical ADR Options

Alternative dispute resolution is often faster and less expensive than CCMA or Labour Court proceedings. Employers should consider embedding ADR mechanisms into their employment framework, particularly in the current period of regulatory transition. Practical options include:

  • Internal grievance procedure with escalation. Ensure the staff handbook includes a clear, step-by-step grievance process with defined timelines and escalation to a senior decision-maker.
  • Voluntary mediation. Offer mediation through an accredited mediator as a first step before any external referral. This demonstrates good faith and can resolve threshold-classification or overtime disputes efficiently.
  • Contractual arbitration clause. Include a clause in employment contracts requiring disputes arising from BCEA classification or threshold-related matters to be referred to private arbitration before litigation.

Template mediation-referral clause:

“In the event of any dispute arising from or in connection with the Employee’s classification under the BCEA earnings threshold or any related entitlements, the parties agree to submit the dispute to voluntary mediation conducted by an accredited mediator before referring the matter to the CCMA or any court. The mediation shall take place within 21 days of written notice of the dispute.”

Embedding ADR clauses proactively can significantly reduce the cost and reputational damage of employment disputes during periods of legislative change. Employers with operations across multiple South African regulatory areas should ensure consistency in their dispute-resolution approach.

Communications Plan, Telling Affected Employees and Stakeholders

How employers communicate the threshold change matters legally and operationally. The following guidelines reduce risk:

  • Timing. Issue communications within 14 days of 1 May 2026, before the next pay run where possible.
  • Tone. Be factual and neutral. Do not imply that employees are “losing rights”, above-threshold employees retain significant BCEA protections (leave, notice, written particulars).
  • Format. Use written notice (email or letter) with an acknowledgment slip. Offer a Q&A session or one-on-one consultation for employees with questions.
  • Sample script for managers: “Following the annual adjustment of the BCEA earnings threshold, your role has been assessed against the new figure. [Your position now falls above / below the threshold.] This means [specific protections that now apply or no longer apply]. We invite you to a consultation session on [date] to discuss any questions.”
  • Legal caution. Managers should not advise employees on legal rights, direct all substantive legal queries to HR or in-house legal counsel.

What to Watch Next, Monitoring the BCEA Earnings Threshold and Labour Law Amendment Bill

The legislative landscape is evolving. Employers should build a monitoring calendar around the following key dates and milestones.

Event Date Employer Action
BCEA Determination published (2026 threshold) April 2026 (Government Gazette) Implement threshold from 1 May 2026; run payroll filter immediately
Effective date of new threshold 1 May 2026 Update payroll, contracts and rosters before next pay run
Draft Labour Law Amendment Bill published Feb–Mar 2026 (draft stage) Monitor parliamentary progress; pre-prepare retrenchment and severance processes
Quarterly internal compliance review August 2026 / November 2026 Re-audit employee classifications and contract compliance
Anticipated next threshold adjustment 2027 (date TBC) Set calendar reminder to repeat full checklist process

Early indications suggest the Labour Law Amendment Bill may progress to committee stage later in 2026. Employers should subscribe to Government Gazette alerts, track the Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 analysis for updates, and schedule quarterly internal reviews until the legislative position stabilises.

Conclusion, Act Now on the BCEA Earnings Threshold in South Africa

The 2026 adjustment to the BCEA earnings threshold in South Africa is not merely administrative, it reshapes overtime obligations, contract terms and workforce classification for every employer in the country. Combined with the draft Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026, which may increase severance costs and broaden employee protections, the compliance burden on HR teams and in-house counsel is substantial. Employers who complete the 12-step employer compliance checklist outlined above, update contracts with clear threshold-linked clauses, model retrenchment exposure under both current and proposed rules, and embed ADR mechanisms into their employment framework will be best positioned to manage risk and avoid costly disputes.

For tailored guidance, employers can connect with qualified South African employment law specialists through the Global Law Experts lawyer directory.

Need Legal Advice?

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.

Sources

  1. Government Gazette, BCEA Determination (Earnings Threshold PDF)
  2. Department of Employment and Labour, Press Release
  3. RSM Global (South Africa), 2026 Earnings Threshold Explainer
  4. Werksmans, Understanding the 1 May 2026 BCEA Earnings Threshold Adjustment
  5. Bowmans, South Africa: Earnings Threshold Increases From 1 May 2026
  6. CMS, Raising the Bar: Unpacking the BCEA’s Latest Wage Adjustment
  7. SEESA, BCEA Earnings Threshold 2026 Explained for Employers
  8. Moonstone, Earnings Threshold Changes From 1 May

FAQs

Who is covered by the new BCEA earnings threshold?
Every employee whose total annual BCEA “earnings” (salary plus regular allowances, excluding discretionary bonuses and employer benefit-fund contributions) is at or below R269,600.90 is fully covered by the BCEA’s working-time protections, including overtime pay, regulated hours and meal intervals. Employees earning above this figure are exempt from Chapter Two of the BCEA but retain rights to leave, notice periods and written employment particulars.
At a minimum: run a payroll filter to identify affected employees, reclassify them in the HRIS, update overtime and roster rules, amend employment contracts, adjust payroll software parameters, notify employees in writing and revise internal policies. A detailed 12-step checklist is set out above.
The draft Labour Law Amendment Bill 2026 proposes enhancing the minimum severance-pay formula beyond the current one week’s remuneration per completed year of service. However, the Bill is in draft form and has not been enacted. Employers should model their potential exposure under both the current law and the proposed formula, and monitor parliamentary progress closely.
The national minimum wage increased to R30.23 per hour from 1 March 2026. UIF contributions remain at 1% employee / 1% employer, subject to the contribution ceiling. Payroll systems must reflect both the NMW rate and any earnings reclassifications triggered by the BCEA threshold change.
The threshold applies from its effective date (1 May 2026). If an employee’s annualised earnings cross the threshold on or after that date, for example, due to a salary increase processed mid-month, the employer should apply the new classification from the date earnings exceed the threshold. Any overtime worked before that date at the lower classification should be paid at the statutory rate. Where uncertainty exists, the conservative approach is to pay overtime until the reclassification is confirmed and documented.
No. A change in the BCEA earnings threshold does not authorise an employer to unilaterally amend an employment contract. If the contract contains terms more favourable than the BCEA minimum (for example, overtime pay for above-threshold employees), those terms remain binding unless amended by mutual agreement. Employers must follow a consultation process and obtain the employee’s written consent to any contractual changes.
The official BCEA Earnings Threshold Determination is published in the Government Gazette and is available as a PDF from the gov.za website. The Department of Employment and Labour also issued a press release confirming the threshold and effective date.
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South Africa (2026): Employer Checklist, What to Do Now About the New BCEA Earnings Threshold and Labour Law Amendment Bill

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