Sassa suspends 70,000 grant payments under stricter treasury rules

The South African Social Security Agency has suspended payments to 70,000 social grant beneficiaries as part of intensified reviews to ensure compliance. Nearly 400,000 people have been notified that their eligibility is under scrutiny amid tighter National Treasury oversight. The measures aim to curb fraud and save public funds.

The South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) has ramped up its social grant review programme in response to stricter conditions imposed by the National Treasury. During a parliamentary briefing on 5 February 2026, Sassa CEO Themba Matlou reported that 240,000 grants had been reviewed in the third quarter, leading to the suspension of 70,000 for non-compliance.

Income verification exercises flagged 495,000 individuals as potentially ineligible, with nearly 400,000 beneficiaries notified of ongoing eligibility checks. These efforts have saved the government R44-million monthly, or nearly R500-million annually. Last year, the Treasury introduced requirements such as monthly income checks, expanded verification, and regular reporting to tighten oversight.

Nearly 45% of South Africa's population relies on social grants. Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana recently extended the Social Relief of Distress grant until March 2027, with the Department of Social Development allocated R260-billion for 2026/27 and R271-billion for 2027/28.

Sassa has broadened partnerships for data-matching with entities including credit bureaus, banks, the South African Revenue Service, the National Student Financial Aid Scheme, government payrolls, and correctional services. In the third quarter, 162,000 beneficiaries were selected for further verification, and 201,000 were identified through payroll data as possibly receiving grants while employed by the state. Additionally, 25,000 received letters in December urging them to complete reviews.

The process follows the Social Assistance Act, which mandates confirming ongoing eligibility. Beneficiaries must report changes in circumstances, but Sassa executive manager Brenton van Vrede explained that grants are not automatically cancelled. Recipients get one month after notification to review, followed by further notices before suspension and a final notice before potential cancellation. Suspensions can be lifted by completing reviews within an extended final month, with Sassa often accommodating those who miss initial notices.

To alert beneficiaries, Sassa introduced a 'fourth payment date' for those under review, prompting office visits without immediate suspension. The agency has boosted local office capacity, self-service options, and biometric enrolment to ease access. This follows October 2024 revelations by University of Stellenbosch students Joel Cedras and Veer Gosai of potential fraud in the Social Relief of Distress grant, prompting Sassa's anti-fraud commitments.

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