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How Relocation Applications for Children Are Decided in South Africa

By Mandy Simpson
– posted 53 minutes ago

Few issues in South African family law generate as much anxiety, and as much litigation, as a parent’s wish to move with a child to a new city or country. Understanding how relocation applications for children are decided in South Africa is essential for any parent contemplating a move, any parent opposing one, and any practitioner advising either side. The court’s compass in every case is the best interests of the child, a constitutional standard that shapes every stage of the process, from the evidence you file to the final order a judge makes.

In this guide I set out the legal framework, the step-by-step court process, a detailed evidence checklist, and realistic timelines, drawing on the Children’s Act 38 of 2005 (“the Children’s Act”), the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (“the Constitution”), and the approaches South African courts have adopted in recent judgments.

Here is what you will learn:

  • The statutes and judicial tests that govern child relocation in South Africa.
  • Who can apply, and when court permission is required.
  • A step-by-step walkthrough of the court process.
  • A detailed evidence checklist, the documents judges expect to see.
  • How urgency and interim relief work when time is short.
  • The role of the Family Advocate and expert witnesses.
  • Typical court orders and practical post-decision arrangements.
  • Realistic cost and timeline estimates.

Legal Framework, Statutes and the Judicial Test for Child Relocation in South Africa

South Africa’s approach to child relocation rests on two constitutional pillars. Section 28(2) of the Constitution declares that a child’s best interests are of paramount importance in every matter concerning the child. The Children’s Act 38 of 2005 translates that principle into a detailed statutory framework, setting out factors a court must weigh when assessing the best interests of the child in South Africa.

Section 7 of the Children’s Act provides a non-exhaustive list of factors relevant to the best-interests inquiry. These include the child’s age, maturity and stage of development; the nature of the child’s relationship with each parent; the capacity of each parent to provide for the child’s emotional, intellectual and social needs; and the likely effect of any change in the child’s circumstances. The court must also consider any family violence, the practical difficulty and expense of contact with each parent, and the need for the child to maintain a connection with both parents, extended family and community.

Crucially, South African courts have consistently held that no single factor is automatically decisive. The applicant bears the onus of placing sufficient evidence before the court to persuade it that the proposed relocation will serve the child’s best interests. This is not a contest between parents’ competing rights but a child-centred inquiry. At Mandy Simpson Attorneys, we stress to clients from the outset that framing the case around the child’s welfare, not around winning a personal dispute, is both the legal requirement and the most effective litigation strategy.

Consent to Relocate, When Is Court Leave Required?

Where both parents hold parental responsibilities and rights, whether through marriage, an acknowledgment of paternity, a parenting plan or a court order, the consent of both is generally required before a child may be permanently removed from the Republic or relocated to a different part of the country in a way that materially affects the other parent’s contact. Section 18(3)(c)(iii) of the Children’s Act provides that a parent who has guardianship must consent to the child’s departure from South Africa. If consent is refused, the relocating parent must apply to court for leave. Relocating without consent or court authorisation risks contempt proceedings and, in cross-border cases, the activation of remedies under the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction.

Who Can Apply and When, Parties, Jurisdiction and Standing

Any person who holds parental responsibilities and rights, or who has a sufficient interest in the child’s care, may bring or oppose a relocation application. In practice, the applicant is usually the primary residential parent, while the respondent is the contact (access) parent.

Jurisdiction depends on the nature of the relief sought. The High Court has inherent jurisdiction as upper guardian of all minor children and hears the majority of relocation matters, particularly international cases. Children’s courts established under the Children’s Act have jurisdiction over care and contact disputes, but complex relocation applications, especially those involving removal from South Africa, are ordinarily brought in the High Court. The choice of forum matters: the High Court inherent jurisdiction as upper guardian of all minor children makes it the preferred forum for many complex relocation disputes, particularly those involving international relocation.

An application is required whenever the proposed move will materially disrupt the other parent’s existing contact rights. Not every intra-city move triggers formal proceedings; the test is whether the relocation will, as a practical matter, undermine the current care or contact arrangement. Inter-provincial moves frequently do, and international relocations generally require either the necessary consent or court authorisation where consent cannot be obtained.

The Court’s Decision-Making Process, Step by Step

Understanding the procedural sequence helps parents and practitioners plan realistically. In my experience, relocation court proceedings in South Africa follow five broad stages:

  1. Formal notice and the founding affidavit. The applicant serves a notice of motion together with a detailed founding affidavit on the respondent. The affidavit must set out the reasons for the proposed move, a concrete relocation plan (housing, schooling, finances, support network), and a proposed contact schedule for the non-relocating parent.
  2. Answering and replying affidavits. The respondent files an answering affidavit opposing or conditionally opposing the move, attaching counter-evidence. The applicant may then file a replying affidavit addressing new points raised.
  3. Family Advocate investigation and report. In most contested relocation matters the court will request a report from the Family Advocate, who investigates the circumstances and makes a recommendation. Social workers and, where appropriate, psychologists or child psychiatrists may also be asked to evaluate the child and the family dynamics.
  4. Interim or urgent hearing (if applicable). Where the move is time-sensitive, for example, if a job start date is imminent or there is a risk that a parent may leave the country without permission, the court may hear an urgent application for interim relief before the final determination.
  5. Final hearing and order. The court hears argument from both parties, considers the evidence and expert reports, and applies the best-interests standard. The judge then grants or refuses the relocation, usually with conditions relating to contact, travel, and review.

Throughout this process, the court retains an inquisitorial function: it may call for further evidence, direct a separate investigation, or appoint a curator ad litem to represent the child’s interests independently. South African judges have emphasised that they are not simply referees between competing parents but active guardians of the child’s welfare.

Evidence Pack, The Documents Judges Expect in Relocation Applications

 

The quality of the evidence pack often determines the outcome. Judges in the relocation court in South Africa consistently look for concrete, verifiable plans rather than vague intentions. Below is a detailed checklist of the items I advise clients to prepare, whether they are applying to relocate or building a case in opposition.

Evidence Item

Why It Matters

Typical Format

Existing court orders / parenting plan

Establishes the current care and contact framework the court is being asked to change

Certified copies of orders; signed parenting plan

Proposed relocation plan (housing)

Shows the child will have a stable, safe home at the destination

Lease agreement, property purchase offer, estate agent letter

Support network at new destination

Demonstrates the availability of family, friends, childcare assistance and community support to assist the child and relocating parent with the transition

Affidavits from family members, letters of support, proof of residence of relatives, childcare arrangements, community or religious organisation details

Proposed schooling arrangements

Demonstrates continuity of education and equivalent or better schooling

School acceptance letter, prospectus, comparative school profiles

Employment or financial plan

Proves the applicant can support the child at the destination

Employment contract, salary letter, business plan, bank statements

Proposed contact schedule for non-relocating parent

Shows the applicant has considered the child’s ongoing relationship with the other parent

Written proposal covering holidays, video calls, travel arrangements and costs

Travel and immigration documents (international moves)

Confirms the legality and logistics of the move; relevant to Hague Convention risks

Visa approvals, work permits, passport copies, country-specific immigration letters

School reports and academic records

Gives the court a baseline of the child’s current performance and needs

Latest report cards, teacher letters, IEP/remedial records

Medical records (if relevant)

Addresses any health concerns or specialist treatment the child requires

GP or specialist letters, prescription summaries, therapy reports

Family Advocate / social worker report

Independent, court-directed assessment of the child’s circumstances and each parent’s capacity

Official report filed directly with the court

Psychologist or child specialist report

Expert opinion on the child’s emotional readiness and the likely impact of the move

Formal medico-legal or clinical assessment

Witness statements (family, teachers, caregivers)

Corroborates the child’s day-to-day circumstances and relationships

Signed supporting affidavits

Proof of security and safety at destination

Addresses judicial concern about risk, especially for international relocations

Crime statistics, neighbourhood assessments, social support network details

Sample Evidence Checklist

Use the checklist below as a starting point. Every case has its own facts, but in my practice, I have found that judges respond positively when the pack is complete, well-indexed and filed on time.

  • ☐ Certified copies of all existing court orders and parenting plans.
  • ☐ Detailed relocation plan: housing, schooling, employment, finances.
  • ☐ Proposed contact schedule with costings for travel.
  • ☐ Immigration / visa documentation (international moves).
  • ☐ Child’s latest school reports and any specialist academic records.
  • ☐ Medical and therapeutic records (if applicable).
  • ☐ Family Advocate report (request early, timelines vary).
  • ☐ Independent psychologist or social worker assessment.
  • ☐ Supporting affidavits from family members, teachers or caregivers.
  • ☐ Evidence of the child’s views (age-appropriate, discussed with Family Advocate or curator).
  • ☐ Evidence of social support network at the destination, including family members, childcare assistance, community ties and other sources of practical and emotional support.
  • ☐ Financial statements demonstrating ability to fund the move and ongoing contact.

Urgency and Interim Relief, When Relocation Is Time-Sensitive

Some relocations cannot wait for the ordinary court roll. An urgent relocation application in South Africa is appropriate where delay would cause irreparable harm to the child or applicant, for instance, where an employment offer lapses, a lease expires, or there is evidence that a parent may unilaterally remove the child from the jurisdiction.

To succeed on urgency, the applicant must demonstrate that the ordinary time frames for hearing the matter would render the relief ineffective. Courts assess urgency strictly: a self-created urgency (such as failing to launch proceedings until the last moment) will usually be refused. The test is whether the circumstances genuinely require the court to deviate from the normal process.

Types of interim relief the court may grant include:

  • Interim interdict. Restraining a parent from removing the child from a particular area or from the country pending the final hearing.
  • Temporary relocation order. Permitting the move on a provisional basis, subject to conditions, while the full application is determined.
  • Emergency contact variation. Adjusting contact arrangements to protect the child’s welfare while urgency persists.
  • Passport surrender order. Directing that a child’s passport be lodged with the court or the Family Advocate to prevent flight risk.

In practice, courts may grant passport surrender orders at an early stage in international cases where there is a credible risk that a parent may relocate with a child before the matter can be properly determined. This aligns with South Africa’s obligations under the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction.

Role of the Family Advocate and Expert Witnesses

The Family Advocate, an officer of the Department of Justice, plays a central role in relocation disputes in South Africa. Under the Mediation in Certain Divorce Matters Act 24 of 1987 and the Children’s Act, the Family Advocate is empowered to investigate the circumstances of the child, interview both parents and the child (where appropriate), and furnish the court with a written recommendation.

The Family Advocate’s report is not binding on the court, but in practice it carries significant weight. Judges regard the Family Advocate as an independent, child-focused voice that has assessed the family dynamics first-hand. Where either party disagrees with the Family Advocate’s recommendation, that party should place persuasive evidence before the court explaining why the recommendation should not be followed.

In addition to the Family Advocate, courts frequently rely on:

  • Social workers, to assess the child’s home environment and the suitability of the proposed destination.
  • Psychologists and child psychiatrists, to evaluate the child’s emotional readiness, attachment patterns and the potential psychological impact of the move.
  • Curators ad litem, appointed by the court to represent the child’s interests independently where the dispute is especially adversarial or complex.

My advice to clients is to engage with the Family Advocate process early and cooperatively. Obstructing or delaying the investigation invariably harms a party’s credibility with the court.

Typical Court Orders and Post-Decision Arrangements

If the court grants the relocation, the order will typically include detailed conditions designed to protect the child’s ongoing relationship with the non-relocating parent. These may cover:

  • A structured holiday and school-break contact schedule.
  • Regular video or telephonic contact on specified days and times.
  • An obligation on the relocating parent to fund (or share the cost of) travel for contact visits.
  • A prohibition on further relocation without fresh court leave.
  • A review clause permitting either parent to approach the court if circumstances change materially.

If the application is refused, the court may impose restrictions on the applicant’s movements, reinforce the existing contact schedule, or order supervised contact if the court is concerned about a flight risk. In some cases the court may grant a conditional refusal, for example, refusing the relocation now but indicating the circumstances under which a fresh application might succeed.

A sample condition clause might read: “The applicant shall ensure that the minor child is available for contact with the respondent during every alternate school holiday and shall bear the costs of return travel between [destination] and [current city] for no fewer than three contact periods per calendar year.”

Practical Advice, For Applicants and Respondents

Whether you are applying to relocate or opposing the move, preparation is everything. Here is what I recommend to clients at Mandy Simpson Attorneys:

If you want to relocate:

  • Build a detailed, realistic relocation plan, not a wishlist, covering housing, schooling, finances and social support.
  • Prepare a generous contact proposal that demonstrates your commitment to preserving the child’s relationship with the other parent.
  • Commission expert reports early; the Family Advocate’s office can be approached before proceedings are launched.
  • Gather all supporting documents (employment offers, school acceptance letters, immigration approvals) before filing.
  • Be honest about your reasons. Courts are sceptical of pretextual motivations, and dishonesty can be fatal to an application.

If you want to oppose the relocation:

  • Focus your affidavit on the child’s stability, attachments, schooling and community ties, not on attacking the other parent.
  • Offer a constructive counterproposal: if you oppose the move, what alternative care and contact arrangement do you suggest?
  • File promptly. Delays in responding can be interpreted as acquiescence.
  • Consider whether commissioning your own expert report (psychologist or social worker) would strengthen your case.
  • Address logistics: show the court that meaningful, frequent contact is feasible under the current arrangements but would be severely diminished by the proposed move.

Timeline and Likely Timetable, From Filing to Final Order

Relocation applications are rarely resolved quickly. The table below reflects conservative estimates based on current High Court roll congestion. Actual timelines vary by division and complexity.

Application Type

Typical Interim Hearing Timeline

Typical Final Hearing Timeline

Local (intra-city) relocation

2–6 weeks (if urgent)

3–6 months

Inter-provincial relocation

3–8 weeks

4–9 months

International relocation (abroad)

1–4 weeks (urgent if clear risk)

6–12 months

Delays are common where the Family Advocate’s investigation takes longer than expected, where expert reports are outstanding, or where multiple interlocutory applications are brought. Parties should plan for the upper end of these ranges and consider mediation as a parallel track to reduce time and cost, South African courts are increasingly supportive of mediated outcomes in relocation disputes, provided the best interests of the child standard is met.

Cost Considerations and Court Fees

Relocation litigation can be expensive. Typical cost items include attorney and counsel fees for drafting affidavits and attending hearings, expert report fees (psychologists and social workers commonly charge substantial fees for relocation assessments, often ranging between R15 000 and R40 000 depending on the complexity of the matter and the expert involved), and travel costs where parties are in different provinces. Court filing fees are modest by comparison. Cost orders are discretionary; the court may order the unsuccessful party to pay the other’s costs or may make no costs order where the matter is genuinely child-focused. In my experience, the total legal cost for a contested relocation application from launch to final order can range from R100 000 to R500 000 or more, depending on complexity of the matter, the extent of expert involvement and whether the matter proceeds to trial.

How Relocation Applications for Children Are Decided, When to Seek Legal Advice

If you are considering relocating with your child, or if you have been served with a relocation application, early legal advice is critical. The earlier you engage a family law practitioner, the stronger your evidence pack and the more realistic your expectations. You can find a lawyer through Global Law Experts’ directory, and I encourage any parent facing these issues in South Africa to consult a specialist who understands both the statutory framework and the practical realities of relocation litigation.

Conclusion and Next Steps

Every relocation application for children in South Africa comes down to a single question: will the proposed move serve the child’s best interests? The answer depends on evidence, preparation and an honest engagement with the court process. Whether you are planning a move or resisting one, the guidance in this article should help you understand what lies ahead. My strong recommendation is to obtain specialist family law advice as early as possible, the quality of your preparation will shape the outcome.

Last updated: 15 July 2026

Need Legal Advice?

For specialist advice on this topic, contact Mandy Simpson at MANDY SIMPSON ATTORNEYS.

Sources

  1. Children’s Act 38 of 2005, South African Government
  2. Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
  3. B.M.S v J.N.W (2024/110526) [2025] ZAGPJHC 112 (10 February 2025)
  4. South African Department of Justice, Family Advocate
  5. Jackson v Jackson (18/2001) [2001] ZASCA 139; 2002 (2) SA 303 (SCA) (29 November 2001)
  6. H.M.F v M.G.W.F (52/2005) [2005] ZASCA 123; [2006] 1 All SA 571 (SCA); 2006 (3) SA 42 (SCA) (1 December 2005)

FAQs

Can a parent move abroad with a child without the other parent's consent?
No, not if the other parent holds parental responsibilities and rights, in particular, guardianship rights under the Children’s Act 38 of 2005. Consent in writing or a court order authorising the move is required. Removing a child from South Africa without consent or court leave may constitute child abduction and trigger remedies under the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction.
Section 7 of the Children’s Act sets out a range of factors, including the child’s age, emotional and intellectual needs, the nature of the child’s relationship with each parent, the capacity of each parent to provide for the child, the likely effect of any change in circumstances, the practical difficulty and expense of maintaining contact, the child’s physical and emotional security, and any history of family violence. The court weighs all relevant factors, no single factor is automatically decisive.
Build a structured evidence pack that includes certified copies of existing court orders and parenting plans, a detailed relocation plan covering housing, schooling and finances, a proposed contact schedule for the non-relocating parent, immigration or visa documentation for international moves, school reports, medical records if relevant, the Family Advocate’s report, and independent expert assessments. Well-indexed, complete evidence packs are viewed favourably by the court.
Yes. A parent may apply for urgent interim relief, such as an interdict restraining the other parent from removing the child from the jurisdiction, or a passport surrender order. The applicant must show that the circumstances are genuinely urgent, that delay will cause irreparable harm, and that there is no alternative remedy. Self-created urgency (failing to act promptly) will be held against the applicant.
Costs vary depending on complexity, but typical items include attorney and advocate fees, expert report fees (ranging from R15 000 to R40 000 per assessment), court filing fees (relatively modest), and travel costs. Total legal costs for a contested matter can range from approximately R100 000 to R500 000 or more. Cost orders are at the court’s discretion.
South African courts consider the views of the child, taking into account the child’s age, maturity and stage of development. The child’s views are not determinative but they are an important factor in the best-interests analysis. The child may be interviewed by the Family Advocate, a social worker, or a psychologist, and in some cases a curator ad litem is appointed to present the child’s perspective to the court.
Yes. Courts regularly grant relocation subject to detailed conditions designed to safeguard the child’s relationship with the non-relocating parent. These conditions may include structured holiday contact, regular video calls, cost-sharing for travel, and a prohibition on further relocation without fresh court leave. The court may also include a review clause allowing either party to seek variation if circumstances change.
Courts examine whether the destination country is a signatory to the Hague Convention on International Child Abduction, the enforceability of South African court orders in the destination jurisdiction, the stability and safety of the proposed destination, and the risk that the relocating parent may obstruct future contact. Passport surrender orders and travel restrictions are common precautionary measures in international cases.
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How Relocation Applications for Children Are Decided in South Africa

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