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Nomads & Communities
17APR

Schreiber names a nomad visa lane

3 min read
13:28UTC

South Africa's Cabinet approved a points-based white paper on Friday 3 April, naming a remote-work visa lane.

SocietyDeveloping
Key takeaway

Cabinet has named a remote-work visa lane, but the points-based citizenship pathway leaves long-stay Zimbabwean residents without a route.

South Africa's Cabinet approved the Revised White Paper on Citizenship, Immigration and Refugee Protection on Friday 3 April 2026, presented by Minister of Home Affairs Leon Schreiber 1. The paper introduces a points-based migration system, names new visa categories for remote work, start-ups and skilled workers, sets up an Electronic Travel Authorisation programme, and adopts a First Safe Country Principle for asylum seekers. Permanent residency would no longer convert automatically into citizenship under the new architecture; a separate merit application would be required.

The paper sits at policy stage. Parliament must pass enabling Acts before any element binds in law, and no timetable has been published for those Acts. The naming of a remote-work visa category at Cabinet level is itself the news; until the national assembly receives the bill, the rest is signalling. Read against the DHA stay concession of late March , the same week describes a department writing the future at one desk and rolling forward an emergency patch at another.

For long-stay communities outside the nomad cohort, the merit pivot raises a separate question. Around 178,000 holders of the ZEP (Zimbabwean Exemption Permit, granted to long-stay Zimbabwean residents) lose the automatic permanent-residency path the previous regime offered. A points-based system scores applicants on skills, education, language and experience; a working life of low-credentialed residence does not earn points under the new criteria.

Nicholas Ngqabutho Mabhena, Zimbabwean Community Chair, told Southerton Business Times that "you will have a Zimbabwean who has been here since 1994 who cannot become a citizen because they do not meet the necessary skills requirements" 2. The figure he names is the operational test of the architecture: a points-based pathway to citizenship is fair only to the cohort whose skills the points reward, and the white paper offers no transitional credit for years already given.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

South Africa's Cabinet approved a major overhaul of the country's immigration rules on Friday 3 April. The new plan introduces a points-based system where you score marks for skills, education, language and experience, and if you score enough, you can get a visa or residency. There are also new visa categories specifically for remote workers and start-ups. Parliament must pass enabling Acts before any element takes effect, and no date has been set for that. In the meantime, about 178,000 Zimbabwean residents who have been in South Africa for many years may not qualify under the new points system, because it rewards professional skills rather than years of low-skilled work.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The DHA's structural processing failure has a documented history: the department has issued annual stay-extension concessions in 2023, 2024, 2025, and now 2026. Each concession acknowledges the same operational bottleneck: the biometric and supporting-documentation review process requires more staff than the department employs.

The Parliamentary Portfolio Committee on Home Affairs has noted in four successive annual reports that DHA headcount is 23% below the approved establishment, with the vacancy rate concentrated in the adjudication and biometric-review functions.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    The Helen Suzman Foundation and Scalabrini Centre's Constitutional Court litigation on DHA delay may produce a court-ordered processing deadline before the white paper's enabling legislation reaches Parliament, forcing DHA to simultaneously defend two incompatible commitments.

  • Opportunity

    If Parliament receives the enabling bill with a remote-work visa category by Q4 2026, South Africa becomes the first Sub-Saharan African state with a formal nomad visa pathway, creating a competitive differentiator versus Kenya, Ghana and Rwanda that have courted the same cohort with less formal instruments.

First Reported In

Update #2 · Spain's six-day housing arc, Georgia's cliff

South African Government News Agency (SAnews)· 29 Apr 2026
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