South Africa’s retirement landscape is undergoing one of its most significant legislative shifts in decades with the Pension Funds Amendment Act, 2024. While the changes do not establish a mandated national retirement age, they introduce structural reforms to how retirement savings are managed, accessed, and preserved — reforms that are likely to shape retirement policy and individual financial behaviour well into the future.
The central reform introduced by the Pension Funds Amendment Act is the two-pot retirement system, designed to balance long-term retirement security with limited access to savings for emergencies. Under this system, contributions to retirement funds are allocated into two distinct components:
Additionally, pre-existing retirement savings (before implementation) are held as a vested component.
Under the new legislative regime, one-third of future contributions made to a retirement fund is allocated to a savings component. This portion is intended to give members controlled access to part of their retirement savings before actual retirement — but only under specific conditions:
The design reflects recognition that many individuals face financial emergencies yet traditionally could not access retirement savings without resigning or cashing out entirely. The savings component aims to reduce reliance on high-interest debt and provide short-term financial flexibility.
The retirement component captures two-thirds of future contributions and remains locked until formal retirement. These funds:
Funds accumulated before the system’s commencement (1 September 2024) form a vested component:
The Pension Funds Amendment Act requires retirement funds and trustees to amend their rules, adjust investment strategies, and update administrative systems to align with the two-pot structure. Pension fund rule changes must be approved by regulators such as the Financial Sector Conduct Authority (FSCA) before implementation.
Post-implementation activity includes:
The amendments also clarify how deductions (for example, court-ordered maintenance) and intra-fund transfers are applied across the two components, preserving fairness and member protections.
While the two-pot system does not change retirement age laws, it does influence how retirement savings are structured and accessed:
The Pension Funds Amendment Act marks a notable evolution in South Africa’s retirement landscape. It reflects a policy balance between financial resilience and preservation of retirement security.
For the future:
Overall, while statutory retirement age remains a contractual and fund matter rather than a legislated threshold, the structure of retirement savings and access rights is shifting — a development both employers and fund members should monitor closely.
📞 Unsure how these changes affect your workforce?
From updating internal policies to managing employee queries and withdrawal requests, the two-pot system requires careful handling. HR Consult assists businesses in navigating legislative change with confidence, clarity, and legally sound HR practices.
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Adapted by HR Consult, specialists in South African labour and employment law compliance.
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