Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Average data breach costs SA companies R50m
With data breaches becoming commonplace it seems as if businesses need to now consider not whether they will be victims of a data breach but rather when.
People doing business with any company expect them to keep their data safe. So when there is a data breach it results in not only a large cost to the company but also a massive loss of trust by clients, many of whom will never deal with the company again.
Recent research by the US’s Ponemon Institute, which conducts independent research on data protection, showed that a data breach costs South African companies on average $3.06m or nearly R50m. By comparison, the average data breach in the UK costs $3.88m (R60m), Germany $4.78m (R73m) and in the United States, $8.19m (R130m), the most of all countries.
The costs of data breaches are so high because there are four cost components to any data breach:
- Detection and escalation; which are activities that enable companies to detect and report the breach.
- Notification; the activities the company must undertake to notify people whose data has been compromised, as well as informing regulators.
- Post data breach response; processes to help customers communicate with the company and also the related costs of redress
- Lost business; the largest single cost of a date breach at 36% of total cost. This includes lost business such as revenue loss, business disruption, system downtime and customer acquisition.
The research also showed that globally, the average cost of lost business after a data breach was $1.42m (R22m.)
When surveyed by Gemalto, a Dutch digital security company, nearly two-thirds of people indicated that they would likely end their relationship with a business after their personal information had been exposed. Such is the strong negative correlation between data breaches and customer loyalty.
But it’s not just a once off event and then it’s business as usual. There is an insidious long tail impact too that most organisations are not prepared for. Not only will a business likely continue to bleed customers for years after a breach, but it also deters customers who were considering using the company such is the damage to brand and reputation.
Can new customers be acquired?
Yes, but at a much higher cost than before the breach. This higher cost of acquisition is a long term phenomenon and an ongoing cost for companies which reduces profits. When businesses consider the full impact of a breach, they are likely to take much greater care to prevent it happening.
Latest News
Back to the Future – Amendment of Rule 18 of the Ethical Rules leaves practitioners in uncertain territory
By Neil Kirby - Director and Head of Healthcare & Life Sciences, Slade van Rooyen - Associate and Farah Yassin [...]
Code Red to Code Regulated: South Africa’s Data, AI and Cybersecurity Shift in 2025, and What’s to Come in 2026?
by Armand Swart, Director, Hlonelwa Lutuli, Associate and Hanán Jeppie, Candidate Attorney South Africa's data protection, cybersecurity, and artificial intelligence [...]
The Gauteng school placements crisis (2026) – Why children are still waiting and what the law says
By Naledi Motsiri - Director and Nothando Nyoni - Associate As the 2026 school year begins, many parents in Gauteng [...]
The Introduction of a Dedicated Insolvency Court in Pretoria
by Eric Levenstein - Director and Head of Insolvency & Business Rescue and Amy Mackechnie - Senior Associate Following the [...]
Regulatory Snapshot: Financial Services and AML
by Hilah Laskov, Director In this article, we lay out the main regulatory and legal developments in 2025 that [...]
The Need to Plead Properly – Patel vs South African Securitisation Programme (RF) LTD & Others (790/2024) [2025] SASCA 186
by Jennifer Smit, Director On 8 December 2025, the SCA handed down a decision in the above matter which [...]
