South Africa's points-based work and remote-work Visa rules remain the October 2024 framework, the operative law for any nomad applying now. The Department of Home Affairs (DHA) under Minister Leon Schreiber had its Revised White Paper approved by Cabinet on 3 April 2026, naming a dedicated remote-work visa category , but no implementing regulations have taken effect and the overhaul remains in consultation, slated operational late 2026. DHA Directive 7/2026 extends lawful stay for pending applicants to 30 June 2027 in the meantime. The White Paper is a signal of intent, not a route a remote worker can use today.

South Africa keeps 2024 visa rules
South Africa's points-based work and remote-work visa rules remain the October 2024 framework; the April 2026 White Paper overhaul is still in consultation, slated operational late 2026.
South Africa's remote-work visa overhaul is still in consultation; the October 2024 rules remain the operative law.
Deep Analysis
South Africa's government approved a plan in April 2026 called the Revised White Paper on immigration. It proposed a new points-based visa system and a dedicated visa category for remote workers. South Africa's parliament must still pass separate enabling Acts before any element of the White Paper binds in law, and no such Acts have been tabled. Parliament must pass separate Acts to make any part of it binding, and that process has not started. The rules that actually apply today are the ones set out in October 2024. South Africa's Department of Home Affairs (DHA) has separately issued Directive 7/2026, which extends the lawful stay of any foreigner with a pending visa application until end-June 2027. That protects people caught in the DHA's processing backlog, a problem that immigration lawyers and the Helen Suzman Foundation have taken to court.
South Africa's immigration reform has cycled through five White Papers since 1996 without producing a points-based system, because each cycle produced a policy document that required separate primary legislation, and parliamentary scheduling has repeatedly displaced immigration reform in favour of higher-priority legislation.
DHA's processing backlog, estimated at tens of thousands of pending files by immigration specialist Jaco Brits in April 2026, creates a parallel structural constraint: even if enabling Acts pass, DHA lacks the processing capacity to operationalise a new visa category without additional staffing, which has not been budgeted.
- Consequence
Nomads planning to base in South Africa should route applications through the October 2024 framework. The White Paper's remote-work visa category carries no operational date and no income threshold specification; no application can be lodged against it.
- Risk
DHA Directive 7/2026 extends lawful stay for pending applicants to 30 June 2027, but immigration specialist Jaco Brits has documented cases where outcomes are rejected for unclear reasons, creating a secondary appeals backlog. A compliant applicant under the Directive extension may still face a rejection without substantive reasoning.