SONA 2026 Directive: Igniting Action on Student Housing
In his State of the Nation Address (SONA) delivered on February 12, 2026, President Cyril Ramaphosa spotlighted a pressing challenge in South Africa's higher education landscape: the acute shortage of student accommodation at universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges. Describing it as an 'immediate problem,' he directed Minister of Higher Education, Science and Innovation, Buti Manamela, to collaborate with financial institutions. The goal is to devise innovative financing mechanisms that enable government-backed provision of safe, affordable housing for thousands of students currently at risk of exclusion.
This announcement resonates deeply in a sector where enrollment surges have outpaced infrastructure development for years. With over 1 million students in public universities and TVET colleges combined, the housing gap threatens access to education, particularly for those from low-income backgrounds reliant on the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS).
Minister Manamela echoed this urgency during the SONA debate on February 17, emphasizing student accommodation as a 'binding constraint' on institutional growth and sustainability. His response outlines a multi-pronged strategy blending public funds, private partnerships, and regulatory reforms.
Unpacking the Student Accommodation Crisis: Scale and Causes
South Africa's post-school education and training (PSET) system faces a structural deficit in student housing estimated at 400,000 to 500,000 beds nationwide. Public universities house only about 20-25% of their students on campus, forcing reliance on private off-campus rentals often plagued by poor conditions, high costs, and safety risks.
Take the University of Johannesburg (UJ): For the 2026 academic year, nearly 100,000 students applied for accommodation, yet the institution offers just over 7,000 on-campus beds. Similar disparities plague TVET colleges, where rural campuses struggle even more due to limited private options.
Underlying causes include historical underinvestment post-apartheid, rapid enrollment growth from NSFAS expansion (now funding over 1.2 million students), and urban migration for studies. Gender-based violence (GBV) hotspots in unregulated digs exacerbate vulnerabilities, with recent reports highlighting unsafe accredited housing shortages ahead of the 2026 budget.
NSFAS 2026: Funding Realities and Accommodation Hurdles
The NSFAS, South Africa's flagship student aid program, approved 1.24 million students for 2026, disbursing R63 billion overall, including R4.3 billion initially for tuition and allowances. However, accommodation remains contentious: Of 224,000 applications, only 148,000 signed leases were submitted by early March, risking homelessness as the academic year loomed.
Private Student Housing Association (PSHA) landlords rejected NSFAS's 0% rate increase, demanding 6% hikes to cover inflation (e.g., R5,512/month in metros). NSFAS shifted to direct payments to vetted providers, ditching intermediaries amid corruption probes by the Special Investigating Unit (SIU).
- 194,071 total accommodation apps across unis/TVETs
- 55,653 university apps processed
- Over 100,000 appeals pending (deadline March 31)
- R14 billion projected shortfall in historical debt
These figures underscore NSFAS's hybrid model: Institutions manage some housing, while others receive direct aid.
Student Protests: Voices from the Frontlines
As SONA unfolded in Cape Town, Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) students protested outside, highlighting NSFAS delays and evictions. Similar unrest hit University of Pretoria (UP) over R1,500 top-up fees, University of Fort Hare (UFH) boycotts over squalid conditions, and Wits/Sol Plaatje over funding blocks.
At UCT, suspensions followed fee protests amid nationwide 'no space, no future' cries. United Democratic Movement's student wing (UDESMO) demanded Minister Manamela's war room prioritize evictions and expand 2026 spaces.
These actions reflect deeper frustrations: 33% bed-to-student ratio in some areas, GBV risks, and academic disruptions costing dropout rates up to 50% in first years.Explore UP's NSFAS protests.
Minister Manamela's Comprehensive Response Plan
Responding in Parliament, Minister Manamela committed to SONA priorities: Aligning PSET with labor markets, NSFAS stabilization, and infrastructure acceleration. Key to housing: A national audit of accredited digs, strengthened controls, and readiness for 535,000 funded spaces despite limits.
In his February 17 debate speech, he hailed universities' efforts amid pressures, pledging long-term planning. Recent briefings confirm SIU probes into NSFAS abuses and direct provider payments.Read Minister's Ekurhuleni update.
Innovative Partnerships: Financial Institutions Step In
Central to SONA's vision: Minister Manamela partnering with banks and financiers for public-private models. This could involve government guarantees, low-interest loans, or build-operate-transfer schemes to fast-track 100,000+ new beds.
- Government-backed bonds for housing projects
- Tax incentives for private developers
- Risk-sharing with Development Bank of Southern Africa (DBSA)
- Blended finance for TVET rural expansions
Private sector welcomes this, citing profitability in student housing amid demand. Early models at UJ and Stellenbosch show success with vetted off-campus partnerships.Discover higher ed job opportunities in expanding infrastructure.
Case Studies: Bright Spots Amid Challenges
Nelson Mandela University (NMU) exemplifies progress via TVET collaborations and transformation roadmaps. University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) launched hydrogen plants alongside housing pledges. Yet, Stellenbosch University (SU) faced vandalism and governance rows, highlighting enforcement needs.
| Institution | Beds Available | Apps 2026 | Initiatives |
|---|---|---|---|
| UJ | 7,000 | 100,000 | Private partnerships |
| CPUT | Limited | High | Minister intervention |
| UFH | Insufficient | N/A | Boycott resolutions |
New Ekurhuleni University targets first students pre-2029 via temp facilities, funded by reprioritised grants.
Regulatory Reforms and Future Safeguards
Manamela's agenda includes SETA governance clean-ups, foreign academic compliance, and MQA skills alignment. For housing: Mandatory accreditation, anti-exploitation war rooms, and mental health mandates (1 counselor per 100 students).Career advice for HE professionals.
Parliament demands lists of foreign hires sans scarce skills, tying into capacity building.
Implications for Students, Careers, and Economy
Better housing boosts retention (currently 40-50% dropouts), employability, and GDP via skilled graduates. For NSFAS qualifiers, stable digs mean focus on studies; for academics, less disruption aids research.
Explore Rate My Professor for insights into campus life or university jobs in admin/facilities.
Photo by Clodagh Da Paixao on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: A Transformed Higher Education Landscape
By 2030, SONA targets could add 200,000 beds, new unis like Ekurhuleni/Hammanskraal, and aligned curricula. Success hinges on execution: Monitor NSFAS disbursements, private buy-in, and protest resolutions.
Students, leverage resources like higher-ed-jobs, career advice, and professor ratings. Institutions, post openings via post a job.
This SONA pivot promises equity, urging stakeholders to unite for sustainable access.Full SONA transcript.
