The South African higher education landscape continues to grapple with persistent challenges in providing safe, affordable, and dignified accommodation for its growing student population. On 2 July 2026, Minister of Higher Education and Training Buti Manamela will deliver the keynote address at the opening of the 2026 South African Union of Students National Student Accommodation Indaba, hosted at the University of KwaZulu-Natal Westville Campus. The multi-day gathering, running through early July, brings together student representative councils from all 26 public universities, institutional management, government officials, private accommodation providers, and civil society partners to chart a path forward for student housing.
Understanding the Scale of South Africa’s Student Housing Challenge
Public universities in South Africa enrol hundreds of thousands of students each year, yet on-campus beds remain severely limited. Many students rely on off-campus options, including private rentals and informal backyard dwellings that often fail basic safety and quality standards. The National Student Financial Aid Scheme, known as NSFAS, plays a central role by providing allowances that cover accommodation costs for qualifying students, yet delays in payments and accreditation bottlenecks have created friction between universities, students, and landlords.
Accreditation of off-campus residences involves rigorous inspections by the Department of Higher Education and Training to ensure compliance with health, safety, and infrastructure requirements. Institutions such as the University of the Witwatersrand, Stellenbosch University, and the University of Cape Town have expanded their own residence portfolios in recent years, but demand consistently outstrips supply. Rural and peri-urban campuses face additional hurdles, with limited private-sector investment and longer commutes that affect academic performance and student wellbeing.
Minister Manamela’s Leadership in the Higher Education Sector
Buti Manamela assumed the role of Minister of Higher Education and Training in July 2025 and has prioritised stabilisation of NSFAS, timely disbursement of allowances, and closer collaboration with the private sector on housing. His earlier statements on academic-year readiness have repeatedly highlighted accommodation as a binding constraint on access and success. The forthcoming keynote is expected to outline concrete steps toward scaling accredited beds while protecting student funding streams.
Deputy Minister Nomusa Dube-Ncube and Deputy Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure Sihle Zikalala are also scheduled to participate, signalling a whole-of-government approach that links higher education funding with infrastructure development and regulatory oversight.
The Role of the South African Union of Students in Shaping the Agenda
The South African Union of Students, SAUS, represents student representative councils across public universities and has long advocated for improved living conditions. The Indaba provides a platform for student leaders to present data on overcrowding, exploitative rental practices, and the mental-health toll of insecure housing. Past engagements have influenced policy tweaks, including clearer guidelines on accreditation timelines and direct payment mechanisms to verified providers.
Participants will examine case studies from institutions that have successfully partnered with private developers under public-private models, as well as lessons from TVET colleges where similar accommodation pressures exist.
Photo by Gerardo Marrufo on Unsplash
Key Policy Priorities Expected in the Keynote
Observers anticipate that Minister Manamela will emphasise three interconnected priorities: accelerating the accreditation pipeline, expanding dedicated funding windows for new residence construction, and strengthening enforcement against non-compliant landlords. The Department has already established a “War Room” mechanism to resolve payment disputes and registration blockages in real time, an approach that could be extended to accommodation matters.
Additional focus areas include integrating student housing needs into broader infrastructure planning through the Department of Public Works and Infrastructure, and leveraging data from the Council on Higher Education to target resources at historically disadvantaged institutions.
Impacts on Student Success and Institutional Stability
Research consistently shows that students in stable, well-located accommodation achieve higher pass rates and lower dropout figures. Conversely, those forced into substandard or distant housing report higher stress levels, transport costs, and safety concerns. Universities themselves face reputational and operational risks when accommodation shortfalls lead to protests or legal challenges.
The Indaba is therefore not merely a housing forum but a strategic conversation about the sustainability of the entire post-school education and training system. Improved housing directly supports the National Development Plan goals of expanded access and improved throughput rates.
Private-Sector and Community Partnerships
Private developers have shown increasing interest in purpose-built student accommodation, yet regulatory uncertainty and payment delays have tempered investment. The Indaba offers an opportunity to clarify procurement processes, risk-sharing models, and performance standards that could unlock additional capital. Community-based initiatives, including partnerships with local municipalities for land release and infrastructure support, will also feature in discussions.
International Perspectives and Lessons for South Africa
While South Africa’s context is unique, comparable challenges exist in other emerging economies. Delegations may reference successful models from countries that have blended public subsidies with private delivery while maintaining strict quality controls. The Department of Higher Education and Training continues to monitor global best practice through its international partnerships and the Southern African Regional Universities Association.
Looking Ahead: Implementation and Monitoring
Following the Indaba, stakeholders expect a joint communiqué outlining measurable targets for additional accredited beds, streamlined accreditation procedures, and improved NSFAS accommodation disbursement timelines. Regular progress reports to the Portfolio Committee on Higher Education and Training will help maintain accountability.
Universities are already preparing institutional action plans that align with anticipated national directives, ensuring that the momentum generated at UKZN translates into tangible improvements for the 2027 academic year and beyond.
Conclusion: A Pivotal Moment for Student Housing
The 2026 SAUS National Student Accommodation Indaba arrives at a critical juncture. With Minister Manamela’s keynote setting the tone, the gathering has the potential to catalyse coordinated action across government, institutions, students, and the private sector. Safe, dignified accommodation is not a peripheral concern but a foundational requirement for equitable higher education in South Africa. The outcomes of this week’s deliberations will shape the living and learning experiences of hundreds of thousands of students for years to come.
Further information on the Indaba programme and registration is available through official SAUS and DHET channels. Institutions and stakeholders are encouraged to engage actively to ensure that policy translates into practice on the ground.
