Domestic workers’ pay rises in 2026: Here’s what South African households must know

Loading player...
The Department of Employment and Labour has announced the latest updates to South Africa’s National Minimum Wage, affecting domestic workers, farm workers, and other applicable employees. Following recommendations from the National Minimum Wage Council, the rate has been increased by 5%, moving from R28.79 to R30.23 per ordinary hour worked.

For a standard 45-hour work week, the increase translates to a weekly wage of R1,264.85. When calculated over a month of 4.3 weeks (or 195 hours), the minimum becomes R5,894.40. For households employing domestic workers on a more typical 160-hour month, the minimum monthly wage rises to R4,834, up from R4,606 in 2025.

Households must also note that South Africa’s minimum wage laws require employers to pay for at least four hours of work each day, regardless of the actual hours worked. This sets the true daily minimum for domestic workers at approximately R121, an increase from R115 last year.

Domestic workers have been fully covered by the National Minimum Wage since 2022. However, data suggests that many workers are still earning below the legal minimum. According to BusinessTech, median salaries reported by Stats SA show that domestic workers earn around R2,350 per month, equivalent to R14.69 per hour for a 160-hour month. This is less than half of the 2026 minimum wage.
5 Feb English South Africa Society & Culture · Personal Journals

Other recent episodes

Men's Mental Health month: KZN men share their stories

Stacey and J Sbu tackled Men's Mental Health Month, unpacking why men account for nearly 80% of recorded suicides in South Africa - a situation the Department of Women, Youth and Persons with Disabilities has declared a national crisis. Men called in, sent voicenotes and messaged in to share what…
8 Jun 18 min

If you look for something, you'll find something...

A listener from Queensburgh shared that he went snooping on his partner's phone and found flirtatious messages. He asked whether to confront her and risk exposing himself or stay quiet. Stacey and J Sbu opened it up to listeners and the calls and voice notes came flooding in. While some…
4 Jun 10 min

Wifey's Hotline: Something that would fall apart if you stopped doing it

Stacey and J Sbu opened the Wifey's Hotline asking the ladies to share the things they do at home that would completely fall apart if they stopped. From invisible household tasks to the little things partners never notice, the wives had plenty to say. We even spoke to Debbie and her…
3 Jun 10 min

Tipping in SA: Do we do it because we want to or because we have to?

Stacey and J Sbu opened up the tipping debate on Great Drive, should you tip because you want to or just to dodge the guilt?   Listeners weighed in on whether it's about ubuntu and supporting low-wage workers; or whether employers should simply be paying a fair wage. Missed it…
2 Jun 12 min

Violence in KZN schools: Whose fault is it and how do we fix it?

Stacey and J Sbu discussed a deeply concerning pattern of school violence in KwaZulu-Natal, after two separate incidents unfolded on the same Friday - a Grade 10 learner stabbed by two junior pupils outside school gates and a mass brawl in Northdale. With over 2 300 cases of violence, drug…
1 Jun 15 min