Legal updates and opinions
News / News
CIPC certificate for permitted services
By Jacques van Wyk, Director and Thabisa Yantolo, Candidate Attorney
The Department of Trade and Industry have not yet provided clarity on whether an entity rendering a “permitted service” in terms of the Regulations to the Disaster Management Act 2002 (published by the Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs on 29 April 2020), is required to obtain a certificate (or to update their existing certificates) from the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission’s (“CIPC“) Bizportal website.
The Bizportal website has however been updated and despite the reference to “essential services” it now includes a link to the “Alert Level 4 Regulations”. It also refers employers to these Regulations in order to determine whether they can apply for such a certificate.
When making the application the employer must enter its enterprise number in order to initiate the application process. The employer will then be required to select a business category and to disclose the trading name of the business, if applicable. The employer must indicate the number of employees required to work during the lockdown, disclose the ID / passport number of the directors / members of the business and confirm the business trading address which is automatically generated. Importantly, the business categories available for the employer to select from now correspond with the ‘permitted services’ in the ‘Alert Level 4 Regulations’. This indicates that a certificate now also applies to the ‘permitted services’ as per the Regulations.
It is advisable that a business providing a ‘permitted service’ under the Regulations should apply on the Bizportal website. The application for the certificate can be found at: https://www.bizportal.gov.za/essential_service.aspx.
Latest News
Urgency misconceived: A cautionary note on process, principle and professional responsibility
by Bradley Workman-Davies, Director The decision in Wheatley v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation & Arbitration & others (2026) 47 ILJ [...]
Digital taxes are reshaping cross-border e-commerce economics in Africa
by Tebogo Sibidla, Director Digital taxation has moved from policy debate to regulatory reality. Governments across the world are implementing [...]
A safe voice or silent risk: An attempt at reforming whistleblower protection through the Protected Disclosures Draft Bill
by Harold Jacobs, Director, Luyanda Lebepe, Senior Associate and Kian Steytler, Candidate Attorney The case of Babita Deokaran, a senior [...]
Recent Competition Tribunal Case clarifies approach to ownership conditions in South African merger approvals
by Pieter Steyn, Director In a recent case, the Competition Tribunal clarified its approach regarding the imposition of conditions for [...]
Proposed New Capital Flow Management Regulations fail to live up to expectations
by Kyle Fyfe, Director On 17 April 2026, National Treasury and the South African Reserve Bank published the long awaited [...]
Understanding the 1 May 2026 BCEA Earnings Threshold Adjustment: Implications for employers and employees
by Banky Sono, Director, Dakalo Singo, Head of Pro Bono, Neo Sewela, Director and Sandile Mogweng, Candidate Attorney The Minister [...]
