On 26 February 2026, the Minister of Employment and Labour published the Labour Law Amendment Bill for public comment.
The proposed amendments signal meaningful changes to South Africa’s labour law landscape and, if enacted, will directly affect how employers manage employment contracts, leave, retrenchments, probation, minimum wage compliance and more.
These amendments follow over two years of engagement between government, organised labour and business through NEDLAC, as well as recent Constitutional Court rulings on parental leave.
If passed, the Bill will introduce changes to the following legislation:
The Bill proposes a new section 9B in the BCEA to regulate:
Employers would need to clearly define:
If shifts are cancelled without proper notice, employees would still be entitled to payment.
Purpose: Greater predictability and income protection for vulnerable workers.
Following the Van Wyk Constitutional Court ruling, the Bill introduces a gender-neutral parental leave framework, including:
The UIA will be amended to align UIF benefits with these changes.
Statutory severance pay may increase from:
This increase would apply only to years of service completed after the amendment takes effect.
The Bill proposes a broader definition of an employee, potentially extending labour protections to individuals who:
This aims to curb disguised employment relationships and regulate non-traditional work arrangements.
Under proposed changes to the EEA:
This significantly strengthens employee protections across all prohibited grounds of discrimination.
Deferred payments such as:
will no longer count towards minimum wage compliance.
Minimum wage must reflect actual cash remuneration received.
To support start-ups and small businesses:
may be exempt from bargaining council collective agreements relating to terms and conditions of employment.
Proposed amendments to section 188 of the LRA suggest:
This aims to balance fairness with operational practicality during probation.
Employees earning above R1.8 million per annum (adjusted annually) may:
This reflects the legislature’s view on senior executives’ bargaining power.
Amendments to section 189A propose:
The Bill also removes separate procedural fairness challenges, allowing substantive and procedural disputes to be dealt with together.
📅 Public comments close on 28 March 2026
Employers, industry bodies and labour representatives are encouraged to submit feedback before the deadline.
Although the Bill is not yet law, employers should begin reviewing:
Early preparation reduces compliance risk once amendments take effect.
Labour law rarely changes overnight — but when it does, the impact is felt for years. These proposed amendments reflect a clear shift towards greater employee protection, clearer employer obligations, and modernised workplace regulation.
Unsure how these proposed changes could affect your business?
HR Consult helps employers:
👉 Speak to HR Consult now — because compliance is always cheaper before it becomes a dispute. ⚖️✨
Office: 012 997 0037
E-mail: info@hrconsultsa.co.za
Adapted by HR Consult, specialists in South African labour and employment law compliance.
A Proud HR Consult, a division of BEE Analyst, is a proud Level 4 B-BBEE contributor.