Water quality tests indicate that most beaches across South Africa are ready for the summer rush, with many earning Blue Flag status. However, some areas like Durban show discrepancies in bacteria levels, raising safety questions. Municipalities are enhancing monitoring and lifeguard deployments to protect swimmers.
The Wildlife and Environment Society of South Africa awarded 27 beaches in the Western Cape full Blue Flag status for 2025/26, including eight in the City of Cape Town such as Muizenberg Beach and Camps Bay Beach. These sites received 'good' or 'excellent' ratings for enterococci over the past year, with thresholds above 185 CFU per 100ml considered unsafe. The City of Cape Town collected 5,237 samples, finding only 5% exceeding limits, though Macassar Beach recently hit 670 CFU due to river pollution.
In KwaZulu-Natal, Durban's 23 swimming beaches are officially deemed safe based on E. coli tests, but independent checks revealed high levels at spots like Umhlanga Lighthouse, initially over 3,000 CFU before dropping sharply. Officials called conflicting reports 'fake news' and noted a city portal briefly disappeared, later showing improved figures. Enterococci data remains undisclosed for many sites, exceeding guidelines in some cases. On December 10, Umhlanga's Main and Bronze beaches closed temporarily due to a sewage pump failure.
Eastern Cape beaches in Nelson Mandela Bay, like Humewood and Kings, mostly meet Blue Flag standards, though Brighton and Humewood saw spikes in E. coli and faecal streptococci from sewage spills, later improving. Locals report ongoing concerns near river mouths. Northern Cape data is limited, with no public quality reports from several municipalities.
Across provinces, advice includes avoiding swims 12-24 hours after heavy rain. Over 340 lifeguards are deployed in Cape Town alone, emphasizing safety amid festive crowds.