Legal updates and opinions
News / News
New Earnings Threshold
and Isabella Keeves, Candidate Attorney
As of 1 April 2025, the annual earnings threshold as stipulated under the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997 (“BCEA”) will increase from R254,371.67 per year to R261,748.45 per year.
This increase has arisen from the recent publication of the Government Gazette on 7 March 2025 by the Minister of Employment and Labour. A link to the relevant gazette can be found here, Basic Conditions of Employment Act Determination Earnings Threshold 2025.pdf
The annual earnings threshold is a monetary ceiling for employee income and provides that employees that earn above the threshold on an annual basis will be exempt from certain statutory provisions contained within the BCEA.
These statutory provisions are:
- ordinary hours of work (section 9);
- overtime (section 10);
- compressed working weeks (section 11);
- averaging hours of work (section 12);
- meal intervals (section 14);
- daily and weekly rest periods (section 15);
- pay for work on Sundays (section 16);
- pay for night work (section 17(2)); and
- pay for public holidays where the employee works on a day they would not ordinarily work (section 18(3)).
These provisions are of relevance in that they all ultimately provide a limitation on ordinary working hours, overtime hours, and provide for an entitlement to overtime pay, for employees who earn below the threshold. Employers should keep an eye on this annual threshold amount, as it is changed and updated frequently by the Department of Employment and Labour.
Latest News
Recognising subtle forms of sexual harassment in the workplace
The #METOO movement has correctly focused public attention on inappropriate workplace conduct. After all of the media attention, the obvious ways [...]
All beliefs are created equal – or are they?
Did you know that your beliefs may be protected by labour laws? But how far do these protections extend – [...]
Salary discrimination not automatically unfair
Unfair discrimination on the basis of an inequality in pay - between male and female staff, or staff of different [...]
False workplace racism allegations increasingly punished by courts
The problem of being accused of racism, when the allegation is untrue, is starting to come to the fore and [...]
Business must protect the data of all South Africans
If your business has met all the requirements of European data privacy regulations, do you then also comply with South [...]
Civil damages or even class action suits a possibility for companies failing to protect customer data
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Head of Data Privacy Practice Companies that fail to protect their customers’ personal information may face class [...]
