logo
Understanding all the SASSA grants in South Africa

Understanding all the SASSA grants in South Africa

The Citizena day ago
South Africa Social Security Aid (SASSA) grants are a lifeline for millions of South Africans facing economic and social challenges.
Here's a detailed breakdown of all the different SASSA grants available in South Africa
Older Persons Grant (Old Age Pension)
This grant is given to people over the age of 60 to see them through their old age.
Who qualifies?
South African citizens, permanent residents, or refugees
Aged 60 years or older
Not receiving another social grant for themselves
Pass the means test (limited income and assets)
Amount (2025):
Approximately R2,180 per month for those under 75
for those under 75 R2,200 per month for those over 75
Disability Grant
This grant is given to people with a physical or mental disability which makes the person unfit to work for a period of longer than six months,
Who qualifies?
Aged 18 to 59 years
Medically certified as disabled and unable to work for more than six months
and unable to work for South African citizens, permanent residents, or refugees
Must pass the means test
Amount:
About R2,180 per month
Child Support Grant
This grant is given to needy parents to help them look after and provide the basic necessities for their child.
Who qualifies?
Caregivers of children under 18 years old
Must be a South African citizen, permanent resident, or refugee
Pass the means test
Amount:
R530 per child per month (as of 2025)
(as of 2025) Can include a top-up (formerly Foster Child Grant top-up): R260 additional for orphans or vulnerable children
Foster Child Grant
A foster care grant is a monthly payment to foster parents for children placed in their care by a Children's Court. This grant aims to provide for the basic needs of the child, such as food, clothing, and education, while they are in foster care.
Who qualifies?
Children legally placed in foster care by a court
by a court The foster parent(s) must be South African citizens, permanent residents, or refugees
Amount:
R1,180 per child per month
This grant continues until the child turns 18, or up to 21 if still in school.
Care Dependency Grant
This grant is intended to provide financial support to caregivers of children with severe disabilities who require full-time care. The grant aims to assist caregivers with the costs associated with providing this level of care.
Who qualifies?
Parents or caregivers of children with severe permanent disabilities
The child must be under 18 years old
Must pass both the medical assessment and the means test
Amount:
R2,180 per child per month
Grant-in-Aid
This grant provides financial support to individuals who give full-time care to another person who is unable to care for themselves due to a disability. It is not a standalone grant but rather given in addition to the disability or war veteran's grant.
Who qualifies?
People already receiving an Older Persons, Disability, or War Veterans Grant
Require full-time care from someone else due to a physical or mental condition
Amount:
R510 per month (to assist with the cost of the caregiver)
War Veterans Grant
This grant is specifically for individuals who served in World War II or the Korean War. It provides monthly financial assistance to eligible veterans to help them meet their basic needs.
Who qualifies?
South African citizens who served in the Second World War (1939–1945) or the Korean War (1950–1953)
or the Aged 60+ years or disabled
or Must pass the means test
Amount:
R2,200 per month
Social Relief of Distress (SRD) Grant – R370
This grant is intended for persons in such dire material need that they are unable to meet their families' most basic needs. It is given whilst waiting for the other grants, such as the child care grant to be finalised.
Who qualifies?
South Africans (including asylum seekers and special permit holders) aged 18–59
Unemployed , not receiving any income or other social grants (except child grants)
, not receiving any income or other social grants (except child grants) Not receiving UIF or NSFAS
Amount (2025):
R370 per month
This grant was introduced as a temporary COVID-19 relief but has continued due to ongoing need. It must be reapplied for monthly or confirmed via the SASSA platform.
Need Help Applying?
You can apply online at https://services.sassa.gov.za or visit your nearest SASSA office with the required documentation.
For updates, use the SASSA WhatsApp line (082 046 8553) or call the toll-free number 0800 60 10 11.
The news provided to you in this link has been investigated and compiled by the editorial staff of the Newcastle Advertiser, a sold newspaper distributed in the Newcastle area. Please follow us on Youtube and feel free to like, comment, and subscribe. For more local news, visit our webpage, follow us on Facebook and Twitter, and request an add on our WhatsApp (082 874 5550).
At Caxton, we employ humans to generate daily fresh news, not AI intervention. Happy reading!
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Broken pipes, broken trust: How corruption and vandalism drain SA's water system
Broken pipes, broken trust: How corruption and vandalism drain SA's water system

IOL News

time23 minutes ago

  • IOL News

Broken pipes, broken trust: How corruption and vandalism drain SA's water system

Once again, it's the residents who will bear the brunt of municipal failures to protect and maintain water infrastructure. Image: File Prof Anja du Plessis In a country where access to water is a constitutional right, South Africans are increasingly finding themselves at the mercy of dry taps, leaking and bursting pipes, and failing infrastructure - creating localised water crises. Behind these crises lies a story of growing deliberate sabotage, entrenched corruption, and systemic neglect. The South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC), in its recent policy brief, paints a grim picture of how 'water mafias,' vandalism, and institutional failures have combined to erode the country's water systems and public trust. While South Africa is a water-scarce country, today's crises are not only environmental but also largely human-made. Profits are made through the sabotaging of water infrastructure – vandalism, theft – leaving residents high and dry with buckets and containers, while money overflows in theirs. Water Access Reality According to the latest statistics, 77.1% of households have access to an improved water source (2024) - down from 80.4% in 2023. For many communities, even this access is unreliable or non-existent for months due to theft, non-functioning infrastructure, and even failure to deliver water tanks. Showing the dire state of water access and actual delivery of water supply within numerous provinces around the country, especially small towns and rural areas. Many report water outages or interruptions lasting longer than two days. Some in the City of Johannesburg have gone without water for weeks with poor communication regarding the location of stationary or roaming water tankers. For a nation with the infrastructure and resources to do better, this regression is deeply concerning. Compounding the issue is high water demand and non-revenue water (NRW) - treated water lost to leaks, illegal connections, and poor revenue collection. Estimates suggest that 40–50% (or more) of water is lost before reaching consumers, a staggering inefficiency for a country already battling droughts, climate unpredictability and high water scarcity. Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Advertisement Video Player is loading. Play Video Play Unmute Current Time 0:00 / Duration -:- Loaded : 0% Stream Type LIVE Seek to live, currently behind live LIVE Remaining Time - 0:00 This is a modal window. Beginning of dialog window. Escape will cancel and close the window. Text Color White Black Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Background Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Opaque Semi-Transparent Transparent Window Color Black White Red Green Blue Yellow Magenta Cyan Transparency Transparent Semi-Transparent Opaque Font Size 50% 75% 100% 125% 150% 175% 200% 300% 400% Text Edge Style None Raised Depressed Uniform Dropshadow Font Family Proportional Sans-Serif Monospace Sans-Serif Proportional Serif Monospace Serif Casual Script Small Caps Reset restore all settings to the default values Done Close Modal Dialog End of dialog window. Next Stay Close ✕ Sabotage and the rise of the "Water Mafia" The Presidential Water And Sanitation Indaba and the recent SAHRC's report highlight a troubling trend – the deliberate destruction and manipulation of water infrastructure by criminal syndicates for disruption and profit. These so-called 'water mafias' exploit infrastructure failures for profit. In parts of the Gauteng, syndicates are reportedly closing valves, damaging pipelines and disrupting pump stations – only to resell water through tankers at inflated prices. Residents are forced to pay these informal suppliers while municipal systems remain crippled by the very sabotage that created the demand. Vulnerable, poor and rural communities bear the brunt of these disruptions, often going days or weeks without safe, potable water. Public health risks are rising, hygiene suffers and frustration mounts. Health and economic fallout The effects are not theoretical - they can be deadly. In 2023, a cholera outbreak in Hammanskraal led to at least 20 deaths, traced to contaminated and poorly treated water. In a nation where water infrastructure is failing and poor oversight on municipal level, the chance for such outbreaks become more likely. Economically, the water crisis undermines productivity, business continuity, and investor confidence. When water is scarce or unpredictable, industry slows, agriculture suffers, and job security weakens. For a developing economy already facing various instabilities, the water crisis adds yet another layer of systemic risk. Systemic failures and broken accountability The SAHRC report rightly identifies persistent dysfunction with 105 water service authorities, legally tasked with ensuring affordable, efficient, and sustainable access to basic water and sanitation services. Yet many municipalities' procurement processes remain vulnerable to manipulation and political interference. Maintenance budgets are often cut or diverted, and few face consequences for project failures. Sabotage of water systems can be considered as an attack on public safety and human rights, but prosecutions remain low. A path forward: urgent and possible While the picture is bleak, it is not beyond repair. The SAHRC outlines several important recommendations that deserve swift and decisive implementation to protect the whole water value chain from mentioned threats: 1. Critical infrastructure should be secured and monitored with real-time technology community-based surveillance programmes. 2. The Department of Water and Sanitation, National Treasury and in collaboration with COGTA are currently in the process of implementing the ring-fencing of revenue collected for water – to ensure that funds collected for water and sanitation services are reinvested into infrastructure. 3. Build municipalities capacity with skilled staff, regular audits, and clear consequence management for non-performance. 4. Protect whistleblowers, and investigate major cases through the Special Investigating Unit and the National Prosecuting Authority. 5. Treat sabotage as organized crime, not petty vandalism, requiring strengthening of inter-agency collaboration. As in all solutions and/ or strategies to be implemented, civil society has a major roleto play. Continued public pressure, good quality investigative journalism, and legal activism are essential to hold officials and contractors accountable. Greater transparency is needed – for example, particularly around multimillion-rand water tanker tenders. Communities must be engaged not just as recipients of services, but decrease their own water use and be co-stewards of public infrastructure. Rebuilding this partnership, however, will be difficult in the face of growing mistrust, driven by frequent and prolonged water outages with little warning or explanation.

NSRI: Here's how ‘You too can be a life saver'
NSRI: Here's how ‘You too can be a life saver'

The South African

time17 hours ago

  • The South African

NSRI: Here's how ‘You too can be a life saver'

The NSRI is appealing to South Africans for funds to help maintain operations at its 48 lifesaving stations around the country. Image: NSRI The National Sea Rescue Institute (NSRI) is appealing to South Africans for funds to help maintain operations at its 48 lifesaving stations around the country. ADVERTISEMENT By clicking one button, you too could become a life saver. The NSRI is a registered non-profit organisation that is committed to drowning prevention and focused on saving lives, changing lives and creating futures for those threatened by drowning in South Africa. Its 'Be A Life Saver Too' campaign gives every day South Africans the chance to make a difference. Here are just six ways your support could make that life-saving difference: ADVERTISEMENT Teaches survival swimming Equips rescue volunteers Aids with an animal rescue Contributes to beach safety cameras Fuels our rescue boats and vehicles Installs a pink rescue buoy If you are in a position to donate, click HERE If you are unable to donate, you can still support the NSRI by staying up to date with its latest news and initiatives, by clicking HERE Who are the NSRI? The NSRI are unique in South Africa as the only non-profit organisation focusing exclusively on safeguarding lives and livelihoods in South African waters through education, prevention, and rescue operations. They envision a nation where drowning incidents are minimised, ensuring the safety of all. The NSRI strives to innovate, constantly evolve, and extend our water safety initiatives through empowerment and visibility. Our volunteers are on call 24/7 and are reliant on donations and sponsorships. What the NSRI does The NSRI is manned by over 1 500 unpaid volunteers at 131 service locations, including satellite or auxiliary stations, inland dams and lifeguarded beaches. They mobilise for swift-water and flooding scenarios, fires on vessels, and medical evacuations off ships. The NSRI assists commercial trawlers and leisure yachts and mobilise for fishermen, swimmers, anglers, hikers, paddlers and surfers and achieve our purpose of saving lives, changing lives, and creating futures through water safety education, survival swimming lessons and active rescue. Have you ever seen NSRI volunteers help save a life? Let us know by leaving a comment below, or send a WhatsApp to 060 011 021 1 Subscribe to The South African website's newsletters and follow us on WhatsApp, Facebook, X and Bluesky for the latest news.

South Africa's Eco-DRR Project: a R700 million initiative to combat Climate Change
South Africa's Eco-DRR Project: a R700 million initiative to combat Climate Change

IOL News

time19 hours ago

  • IOL News

South Africa's Eco-DRR Project: a R700 million initiative to combat Climate Change

The recent deaths in the Eastern Cape floods is exactly what this innovative initiative hopes to avoid. It is expected to directly benefit approximately 366,000 people with a further reach of more than 5.1 million South Africans, particularly those residing in areas prone to devastating floods, prolonged droughts, and rampant wildfires. South Africa is poised to make significant strides in combating climate change, thanks to a landmark grant of R700 million (USD 40.1 million) from the Green Climate Fund (GCF). This financial boost will facilitate the launch of the 'Scaling up ecosystem-based approaches to managing climate intensified disaster risks in vulnerable regions of South Africa' project, better known as the Eco-DRR project. Approved by the GCF Board during its recent meeting in Papua New Guinea on 1 July 2025, the Eco-DRR project is set to span eight years with an extensive 20-year impact projected on local communities. This innovative initiative is expected to directly benefit approximately 366,000 individuals, with a further reach of more than 5.1 million South Africans, particularly those residing in areas prone to devastating floods, prolonged droughts, and rampant wildfires. 'The increasing frequency of floods, droughts, and wildfires poses a serious threat to South Africa's communities, especially those in rural and peri-urban areas,' said Dion George, the Minister of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment. He added that this investment will bolster ecological infrastructure, mitigate disaster risks, and enhance adaptive capacities where they are most crucial. The South African National Biodiversity Institute (SANBI) will spearhead the execution of the Eco-DRR project, collaborating with the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and the Environment (DFFE), the South African Local Government Association (SALGA), and four climate-vulnerable District Municipalities across the Eastern Cape, Limpopo, Mpumalanga, and North West provinces. Insights derived from the project are anticipated to inform broader climate change adaptation responses throughout the nation. This investment seeks to deliver far-reaching advantages, particularly to communities facing the harsh realities of climate change impacts. By focusing on the restoration and protection of vital ecosystems, such as wetlands, forests, and catchments, the project will substantially reduce vulnerability to extreme weather events, enhance water security, and promote sustainable livelihoods anchored in nature. Another critical aspect of the Eco-DRR project is its commitment to empowering local governments and communities through training and resources necessary for effective disaster preparedness and climate adaptation. 'The role of biodiversity in South Africa's response to climate change is at the heart of this project," remarked Shonisani Munzhedzi, CEO of SANBI. 'Healthy ecosystems act as natural buffers against climate extremes, protecting lives, infrastructure, and livelihoods. This project marks a significant advancement in climate adaptation financing for South Africa.' SANBI's accreditation as a Direct Access Entity of the Green Climate Fund since 2016 puts the institute in a strategic position to harness global climate finance effectively. This facilitates an alignment of resources with local priorities and needs, thereby strengthening institutional capabilities and ensuring the climate adaptation agenda is driven by South Africans, for South Africans. The Eco-DRR project is part of SANBI's broader climate adaptation portfolio and aligns directly with the GCF's Targeted Results for 2024-2027, focusing on ecosystems and food systems. This initiative promotes integrated, locally driven, and gender-responsive development, paving the way for a resilient, climate-adaptive future for South Africa. Furthermore, its implementation supports the Climate Change Act, addressing the urgent need for action in the face of escalating climate challenges.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store