[codicts-css-switcher id=”346″]

Global Law Experts Logo
companies amendment act south africa

Companies Amendment Act (south Africa): Practical Compliance Checklist for Directors & Private Companies (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 2 hours ago

The Companies Amendment Act South Africa landscape shifted decisively in 2024 when President Ramaphosa signed the Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 and the Companies Second Amendment Act 17 of 2024 into law, with both published in the Government Gazette on 30 July 2024. These companies act amendments introduced far-reaching changes to director remuneration disclosure, takeover notice mechanics and director-duty provisions that directly affect every private company, public company and state-owned enterprise registered under the Companies Act 71 of 2008.

Certain provisions came into force upon proclamation in early 2025, while others remain subject to further ministerial proclamation or supporting CIPC regulations, creating a compliance environment in which directors must act now on what is already effective while simultaneously preparing for obligations still on the horizon.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Directors and company officers should consult a qualified South African company-law practitioner before acting on any of the steps below.

Quick Summary: What Changed and Why This Matters

The companies amendment act 2024 reforms can be distilled into three headline changes that demand board-level attention:

  • Director remuneration disclosure. New and expanded requirements oblige certain companies to prepare and publish a remuneration report, increasing transparency around executive and non-executive pay. The amendments tighten the linkage between shareholder approval and director compensation, with binding and advisory vote provisions depending on the entity category.
  • Takeover notice and procedural clarifications. Act 17 of 2024 refines the definitions of “securities” and “affected transactions” under Chapter 5, tightening procedural timelines and notification requirements for takeovers. Directors receiving an approach must now navigate more prescriptive disclosure and conflict-check obligations.
  • Director duties and personal liability. The amendments sharpen the standards of conduct in sections 75 and 76, refine the business-judgement rule, and clarify the approval process for personal financial interests. Record-keeping and minute-taking duties have also been bolstered.

Taken together, these companies act amendments represent the most significant overhaul of the Companies Act 71 of 2008 since its original commencement. Industry observers expect the practical effect will be to bring private company compliance closer to the governance standards traditionally associated with public and state-owned companies, a shift that requires every board to review its existing policies, resolutions and reporting cycles without delay.

Legislative Status and Timeline of the Companies Amendment Act South Africa

Understanding which provisions are already enforceable, and which remain prospective, is the starting point for any compliance programme. The table below summarises the key dates and their practical implications.

Date Event Practical Implication
30 July 2024 Acts 16 and 17 of 2024 signed and published in the Government Gazette Legislation formally enacted; triggers corporate review of affected provisions
Early 2025 (proclamation) DTIC confirms proclamation of first tranche of operative sections Proclaimed sections take immediate legal effect; boards must comply from this date
2025–2026 (ongoing) CIPC issues guidance notices and draft regulations on disclosure formats Companies must monitor CIPC announcements and align reporting templates
2025–2026 (proposed) Further Companies Amendment Bills tabled for parliamentary consideration Directors should track proposals that could add additional obligations

Effective Provisions Already in Force

The Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC) welcomed the proclamation of certain sections of both Amendment Acts. The proclaimed provisions include refinements to director-conduct standards, conflict-of-interest disclosure processes, and selected takeover-related definitions under Chapter 5. Directors should treat these as immediately operative and should have already updated their board packs and conflict-declaration templates.

Provisions Awaiting Proclamation or Still Proposed

Several provisions, particularly the detailed thresholds for private company compliance with the expanded remuneration-report requirements and the full suite of new takeover regulations, remain subject to further ministerial proclamation or depend on CIPC regulations that are still in draft form. Early indications suggest that these could be proclaimed at any time during 2026, making advance preparation essential. Boards that wait for formal proclamation risk scrambling to comply within compressed timeframes.

Who Is in Scope: Entity and Director Coverage

Not every provision applies uniformly. The companies amendment act distinguishes between entity categories and applies differentiated obligations accordingly. Use the decision tree below to determine your company’s exposure.

  • Public companies: Full suite of new remuneration-disclosure, takeover-notice and director-duty provisions applies.
  • State-owned companies (SOCs): Equivalent obligations to public companies, with additional governance layers under the PFMA and related frameworks.
  • Private companies: Subject to expanded obligations where prescribed thresholds are met (public-interest score, revenue, number of employees). Private companies below the threshold may still be indirectly affected through shareholder-agreement provisions and director-duty refinements.
  • Close Corporations (CCs): Transitional rules apply, see below.

Private Companies, What Changes for SMEs

Private company compliance obligations under the amendments hinge primarily on whether the company meets or exceeds thresholds set out in the Companies Act regulations. Companies that qualify as “regulated companies” or that exceed the public-interest score will fall within the expanded remuneration-disclosure regime. Even private companies below the threshold should note the strengthened director-duty provisions (sections 75 and 76 amendments), which apply universally and are not threshold-dependent. The likely practical effect will be that private company boards must, at minimum, update their conflict-of-interest registers, minute-keeping protocols and standing board resolutions.

Close Corporations, Conversion and Repeal Status

The Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984 has not been formally repealed. However, no new Close Corporations may be registered, and existing CCs operate under transitional provisions of the Companies Act. The amendments do not alter the conversion framework, but they do reinforce that CCs converting to private companies will immediately fall under the full amended Companies Act regime. Boards and members of CCs should assess whether conversion triggers new compliance obligations, particularly around director remuneration disclosure and conflict-of-interest processes, and plan accordingly.

Director Duties and Liability Changes: What Directors Must Check

The companies act amendments strengthen the governance spine of the Act by refining director-duty provisions that apply to every company, regardless of size or type. The practical effect is that directors face a higher standard of scrutiny and a clearer liability pathway if they fail to meet their obligations.

  • Section 75 (personal financial interest): The amended provision tightens the disclosure and recusal requirements when a director has a personal financial interest in a matter before the board. Directors must disclose the nature and extent of the interest at the earliest practicable opportunity, not merely at the meeting where the matter is voted on.
  • Section 76 (standards of conduct): The business-judgement rule has been clarified. Directors must demonstrate that they took reasonably diligent steps to become informed, had no personal financial interest in the matter (or disclosed it properly), and had a rational basis for believing the decision was in the best interests of the company.
  • Meeting frequency and quorum: While the amendments do not prescribe a specific meeting frequency for private companies, the strengthened record-keeping requirements make it essential that boards meet regularly and document decisions comprehensively.

Conflicts and Approval Process

Where a director discloses a personal financial interest, the board (excluding the conflicted director) must determine whether the interest is material. If material, the director must be recused from discussion and voting. The board resolution recording this determination should be minuted in detail. Below is a sample resolution framework:

Sample board resolution extract:

“RESOLVED THAT the disclosure by [Director Name] of a personal financial interest in [matter description] is noted; THAT the interest is determined to be material; THAT [Director Name] be recused from all deliberation and voting on this matter; AND THAT the Company Secretary record this resolution in the minutes of the meeting.”

Record-Keeping and Minutes Checklist

  • Maintain a standing conflict-of-interest register, updated at every board meeting.
  • Record all board resolutions in writing within 10 business days of the meeting.
  • Retain minutes and supporting documents for a minimum of seven years.
  • Ensure that round-robin (written) resolutions are signed by all directors and filed with the minute book.
  • Conduct an annual review of the board charter to confirm alignment with the amended provisions.

Director Remuneration Disclosure: Detailed Compliance Checklist

The expanded director remuneration disclosure requirements are among the most consequential changes introduced by the companies amendment act. The reforms mandate specific reporting obligations and link shareholder engagement directly to pay outcomes.

Entity Type Key Disclosure/Obligation Practical Deadline/Action
Public company Must prepare and publish a full remuneration report; binding shareholder vote on remuneration policy and advisory vote on implementation report Align with next AGM cycle; update notice of AGM and proxy forms immediately
State-owned company (SOC) Equivalent to public company, plus alignment with PFMA and shareholder-compact requirements Coordinate with shareholder ministry; update annual report template
Private company (threshold met) Prepare remuneration summary if public-interest score or prescribed threshold is exceeded; advisory vote may be required depending on MOI provisions 30–90 days: determine threshold status; prepare board report and data pack
Private company (below threshold) No mandatory remuneration report, but strengthened director-duty and conflict provisions apply; voluntary disclosure recommended as governance best practice Review board charter; update conflict register within 30 days
Close Corporation (CC) No direct remuneration-report requirement while remaining a CC; conversion to private company triggers full amended regime Assess conversion implications within 90 days

Preparing the Remuneration Report, Data Checklist

  1. Gather individual director compensation data: base salary, bonuses, share options, retirement contributions, other benefits, for both executive and non-executive directors.
  2. Benchmark against industry comparators: the report should explain the rationale for pay levels, including peer-group benchmarking and performance metrics.
  3. Document the remuneration policy: a forward-looking statement setting out the principles, criteria and weightings used to determine director pay.
  4. Compile the implementation report: a backward-looking account of how the remuneration policy was applied in the reporting period, including deviations and explanations.
  5. Prepare a total-remuneration table: individual, named-director disclosure in a standardised format, covering each component of pay.
  6. Obtain payroll and HR sign-off: ensure that data reconciles to payroll records and has been reviewed by the CFO or finance director.

Approving and Publishing, Board and Shareholder Steps

  • Board approval: The remuneration committee (or the full board where no committee exists) must formally approve the remuneration report before it is included in the annual financial statements or integrated report.
  • Shareholder notification: Include the remuneration report in the notice of AGM. Clearly separate the binding vote on the remuneration policy from the advisory vote on the implementation report.
  • Failed advisory vote: If the advisory vote receives 25% or more dissenting votes, the board must include in its response a description of the steps taken to address shareholder concerns, and an invitation for dissenting shareholders to engage with the company.
  • Publication: The approved report must be available on the company’s website (for public companies) or at the registered office for inspection (for private companies that are required to report).

Takeovers, Notice and Procedural Changes, M&A Checks

The Companies Second Amendment Act 17 of 2024 introduced targeted refinements to the takeover rules South Africa framework under Chapter 5 of the Companies Act. These changes affect the definitions of “regulated company,” “securities” and “affected transaction,” as well as the procedural mechanics for offers and notifications.

The amendments seek to close gaps that allowed certain transactions to escape the Takeover Regulation Panel’s (TRP) oversight and to tighten the timelines for notification and response. Industry observers expect that the net practical effect will be a broader range of transactions captured by the takeover regime and stricter consequences for non-compliance with notice obligations.

Immediate Director Actions on Takeover Approach

  1. Convene the board immediately: On receipt of an approach (formal or informal), the chairperson should convene a board meeting, or at minimum a meeting of independent directors, within 48 hours.
  2. Conflict check: Every director must declare any personal financial interest in the approaching party or the transaction. Conflicted directors must be recused.
  3. Preserve documents: Issue a document-preservation notice to all directors, officers and key employees to prevent destruction of relevant records.
  4. Engage the TRP: Determine whether the transaction falls within the amended definition of an “affected transaction” and, if so, notify the TRP within the prescribed timeframe.
  5. Seek legal advice: Appoint independent legal counsel to advise on compliance with the amended Chapter 5 provisions and to manage communications with the offeror and shareholders.

Shareholder Rights and Notification Timeline

  • Shareholders of a regulated company must be notified of a firm offer within the timeframe prescribed by the TRP rules, generally within two business days of the board’s decision to recommend or oppose the offer.
  • The amendments strengthen the right of minority shareholders to receive equal treatment and fair value in mandatory offers.
  • Circular to shareholders must now include specified disclosures about director interests, independent expert opinions and the basis for the board’s recommendation.

Companies Act Compliance Checklist: The 30/90/180 Day Plan

This is the core deliverable of this guide. Use the checklist below to prioritise actions by urgency. Each item identifies the responsible party, the documentation required and the relevant legal citation under the companies amendment act South Africa framework.

Immediate Actions, Next 30 Days

  1. Board briefing on amendments. Responsible: Chairperson / Company Secretary. Action: Circulate a board memorandum summarising the proclaimed provisions of Acts 16 and 17 of 2024. Citation: Acts 16 & 17 of 2024 (Government Gazette, 30 July 2024).
  2. Update conflict-of-interest register. Responsible: Company Secretary. Action: Obtain fresh conflict-of-interest declarations from all directors. Citation: Amended section 75, Companies Act.
  3. Review board charter. Responsible: Board / Legal Counsel. Action: Amend the board charter to reflect the strengthened director-duty and record-keeping provisions. Citation: Amended sections 73 and 76, Companies Act.
  4. Assess threshold status. Responsible: CFO / Financial Director. Action: Calculate the company’s public-interest score to determine whether the expanded remuneration-reporting obligations apply. Citation: Regulation 26, Companies Act Regulations.
  5. Issue document-preservation policy. Responsible: Company Secretary. Action: Circulate a standing instruction requiring preservation of board minutes, resolutions and financial records for a minimum of seven years.

Near-Term Actions, 31 to 90 Days

  1. Prepare draft remuneration report. Responsible: Remuneration Committee / CFO. Action: If the company exceeds the threshold, begin compiling director compensation data and drafting the remuneration policy and implementation report.
  2. Update MOI and shareholder agreements. Responsible: Legal Counsel. Action: Review the Memorandum of Incorporation and any shareholders’ agreements for provisions affected by the amendments, particularly takeover-related clauses and pre-emptive rights.
  3. Conduct director training. Responsible: Chairperson / Company Secretary. Action: Arrange a training session for all directors on the amended provisions, focusing on conflict disclosure, the business-judgement rule and takeover-response protocols.
  4. Engage with CIPC guidance. Responsible: Company Secretary / Compliance Officer. Action: Monitor CIPC announcements for new regulations, prescribed forms and guidance notes implementing the amendments.

Board Pack Checklist

  • Updated board charter (reflecting amended director-duty provisions)
  • Standing conflict-of-interest declarations from all directors
  • Public-interest score calculation memorandum
  • Draft remuneration report (where applicable)
  • Amended MOI provisions (marked-up against current version)
  • CIPC guidance notes and regulatory updates
  • Document-preservation policy

Company Secretary Actions

  • File any required amendments to the MOI with CIPC.
  • Update the company’s statutory records (register of directors, register of interests) on the CIPC portal.
  • Prepare the notice of AGM to include the remuneration-report resolutions (binding and advisory votes).
  • Calendar all proclamation-watch dates and set automated alerts for Government Gazette publications.

Accounting and Payroll Data Checks

  • Reconcile director compensation data across payroll, share-scheme administration and benefit-plan records.
  • Ensure that the remuneration-report data is consistent with the annual financial statements.
  • Obtain external auditor confirmation that the remuneration disclosures align with International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and Companies Act requirements.
  • Prepare supporting schedules for the CFO’s sign-off on the accuracy and completeness of the data.

Medium-Term Actions, 91 to 180 Days

  1. Publish remuneration report. Responsible: Board / Company Secretary. Action: Include the approved remuneration report in the integrated report or annual financial statements and make it available at the registered office or on the company website.
  2. Shareholder engagement. Responsible: Chairperson / Investor Relations. Action: Proactively engage with significant shareholders ahead of the AGM to explain the remuneration policy and seek feedback.
  3. Close Corporation conversion assessment. Responsible: Members / Legal Counsel. Action: If the CC intends to convert to a private company, commission a full compliance gap analysis against the amended Companies Act.
  4. Monitor further proclamations. Responsible: Company Secretary / Legal Counsel. Action: Track the Government Gazette for proclamation of remaining provisions and any new Companies Amendment Bills introduced in Parliament.
  5. Annual compliance calendar. Responsible: Company Secretary. Action: Establish a rolling compliance calendar that maps all recurring obligations under the amended Act, including filing deadlines, AGM preparation timelines and CIPC reporting dates.

Examples, Templates and Board Resolution Samples

The templates below are illustrative starting points. Each should be adapted to the company’s specific circumstances, MOI provisions and legal advice.

Board Resolution Sample, Approval of Remuneration Report

“RESOLVED THAT the remuneration report for the financial year ended [date], comprising the remuneration policy and the implementation report, as presented to the Board and reviewed by the Remuneration Committee, be and is hereby approved for inclusion in the company’s integrated report and for submission to shareholders at the Annual General Meeting to be held on [date]; AND THAT the Company Secretary be authorised to take all steps necessary to give effect to this resolution.”

Shareholder Notice Sample, Remuneration Report Resolutions

“NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the following resolutions will be proposed at the Annual General Meeting:

Ordinary Resolution [X]: Approval of the Remuneration Policy, ‘RESOLVED THAT the company’s remuneration policy, as set out on pages [X] to [X] of the integrated report, be and is hereby approved by way of a non-binding advisory vote.’

Ordinary Resolution [X+1]: Approval of the Implementation Report, ‘RESOLVED THAT the remuneration implementation report, as set out on pages [X] to [X] of the integrated report, be and is hereby approved by way of a non-binding advisory vote.’”

Companies that require binding votes on remuneration policy (as prescribed by the amended Act for certain entity categories) should adjust the resolution wording accordingly and ensure that the notice of AGM distinguishes between binding and advisory resolutions.

Next Steps for Directors and Private Companies

The companies amendment act South Africa reforms are not a distant compliance horizon, they are an immediate operational reality. Directors of private companies, public companies and state-owned enterprises should prioritise the 30-day actions outlined in the compliance checklist above, beginning with a comprehensive board briefing, updated conflict-of-interest declarations, and a threshold assessment for remuneration-reporting obligations. Those serving on boards of Close Corporations should evaluate the conversion implications before the remaining amendments are proclaimed.

For companies seeking to navigate these changes with confidence, consulting a qualified company-law practitioner with deep experience in director duties, corporate governance and Company practice area, South Africa is strongly recommended. To find a Company lawyer in South Africa, use the Global Law Experts lawyer directory for direct access to specialists in the companies act amendments and private company compliance across all South African provinces.

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. Parliament of South Africa, Act 16 of 2024 (PDF)
  3. South African Government, Companies Second Amendment Act 17 of 2024
  4. Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC), Announcements and Regulations
  5. Department of Trade, Industry and Competition (DTIC), Proclamation Press Note
  6. Webber Wentzel, Amendments Quick Reference Guide
  7. Bowmans, Key Amendments to the Companies Act Now in Effect
  8. Parliamentary Monitoring Group (PMG), Companies Amendment Bill (Archival)

FAQs

1. What is the new amendment to the Companies Act?
The Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 and the Companies Second Amendment Act 17 of 2024 were signed into law on 30 July 2024 and published in the Government Gazette. They introduce changes to director remuneration disclosure, takeover procedures and director-duty provisions under the Companies Act 71 of 2008.
South Africa has not enacted an entirely new Companies Act. The principal legislation remains the Companies Act 71 of 2008. The 2024 amendments modify specific sections of that Act rather than replacing it. The amended Act should be read as the Companies Act 71 of 2008, as amended by Acts 16 and 17 of 2024.
No. The Close Corporations Act 69 of 1984 has not been formally repealed. However, no new CCs may be registered, and existing CCs operate under transitional provisions. CCs that convert to private companies will immediately fall under the full amended Companies Act regime.
Public companies and state-owned companies are required to prepare and publish a remuneration report. Private companies must do so if they meet or exceed prescribed thresholds (public-interest score). Private companies below the threshold are not required to publish a remuneration report but should still comply with the strengthened director-duty provisions.
Both Acts were signed and gazetted on 30 July 2024. The DTIC confirmed the proclamation of the first tranche of operative sections in early 2025. Certain provisions remain subject to further proclamation. Directors should monitor the Government Gazette and CIPC announcements for updates.
A director should immediately convene the board (or independent directors), declare any conflicts of interest, issue a document-preservation notice, assess whether the transaction qualifies as an “affected transaction” under the amended Chapter 5, notify the TRP if required, and engage independent legal counsel.
The official text of the Companies Amendment Act 16 of 2024 is available on the South African Government website and as a downloadable PDF from the Parliament of South Africa website. The Companies Second Amendment Act 17 of 2024 is also available on the Government website.
carf compliance liechtenstein
By Global Law Experts

posted 2 hours ago

Find the right Legal Expert for your business

The premier guide to leading legal professionals throughout the world

Specialism
Country
Practice Area
LAWYERS RECOGNIZED
0
EVALUATIONS OF LAWYERS BY THEIR PEERS
0 m+
PRACTICE AREAS
0
COUNTRIES AROUND THE WORLD
0
Join
who are already getting the benefits
0

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.

Newsletter Sign Up
About Us

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 App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List
About Us

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.

Social Posts
[wp_social_ninja id="50714" platform="instagram"]
[codicts-social-feeds platform="instagram" url="https://www.instagram.com/globallawexperts/" template="carousel" results_limit="10" header="false" column_count="1"]

See More:

Global Law Experts App

Now Available on the App & Google Play Stores.

Contact Us

Stay Informed

Join Mailing List

GLE

Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture
GLE-Logo-White
Lawyer Profile Page - Lead Capture

Companies Amendment Act (south Africa): Practical Compliance Checklist for Directors & Private Companies (2026)

Send welcome message

Custom Message