Legal updates and opinions
News / News
Parental, adoption and commissioning parental leave
By Jacques van Wyk, Director; Michiel Heyns, Senior Associate and Chelsea Roux, Candidate Attorney
The provisions in the Basic Conditions of Employment Act 75 of 1997 relating to parental, adoption and commissioning parental leave came into effect on 1 January 2020. The difference between these types of leave, its applicability, period of entitlement and commencement date are summarised below –
| Type of leave entitlement | Applicable to whom | Period of entitlement | Commencement date | Provisos |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Parental Leave | An employee who is a parent of a child. | 10 consecutive days | The day that the employee’s child is born. | The employer must be informed in writing at least one month in advance, or as soon as reasonably practicable, of the date on which the employee intends to commence parental leave and the date on which he/she intends to return to work. |
| Adoption Leave | An employee who is an adoptive parent of a child under two years. | 10 consecutive weeks | The day that the adoption order is granted or the date the child is placed in the care of a prospective adoptive parent by a competent court, pending the finalisation of an adoption order, whichever date occurs first. |
The employer must be informed in writing at least one month in advance, or as soon as reasonably practicable, of the date on which the employee intends to commence adoption leave and the date on which he/she intends to return to work. If both parents are adoptive parents, one parent may apply for adoption leave and the other for parental leave, provided that the choice is exercised by the two adoptive parents. |
| Commissioning Parental Leave | An employee who is a commissioning parent in a surrogate motherhood agreement (“SMA”). | 10 consecutive weeks | The date that the child is born as a result of an SMA. |
The employer must be informed in writing at least one month in advance, or as soon as reasonably practicable, of the date on which the employee intends to commence commissioning parental leave and the date on which he/she intends to return to work. If both parents are commissioning parents, one parent may apply for commissioning parental leave and the other for parental leave, provided that the choice is exercised by the two commissioning parents. |
| Maternity Leave | An employee who is expecting a child. | Four consecutive months | At any time from four weeks before the expected date of birth (unless otherwise agreed) or on a date from which a medical practitioner or midwife deems it necessary for the health of the employee and/or unborn child. |
The employer must be informed in writing at least four weeks in advance, or as soon as reasonably practicable, of the date on which the employee intends to commence maternity leave and the date on which she intends to return to work. No employee may work for six weeks after the birth of her child, unless a medical practitioner certifies her fit to do so. |
| Maternity Leave | An employee who miscarries or has a stillborn child. | Six weeks | An employee who has a miscarriage during the third trimester of pregnancy or bears a stillborn child is entitled to maternity leave for six weeks after the miscarriage or stillbirth, whether or not the employee had commenced maternity leave at the time of the miscarriage or stillbirth. |
Latest News
The Banks Win on Appeal: SCA Overturns R704 Million High Court Judgment
by Tshegofatso Matlou, Associate, reviewed by Jones Antunes, Director In the decision of African Banking Corporation of Zambia Limited and [...]
Out with the Old: South Africa’s Proposed Overhaul of Exchange Controls and the Inclusion of Crypto Assets
by Janice Geel, Associate and Azraa Sidat, Candidate Attorney, reviewed by Natalie Scott, Director and Head of Sustainability On 17 [...]
Do not call me I’ll call you …… South Africa’s 2026 CPA Amendment Regulations: operationalising the national opt‑out regime for direct marketing and shifting day‑to‑day anti‑spam responsibility to the National Consumer Commission
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of Regulatory The Consumer Protection Act Amendment Regulations, 2026 deliver the long‑awaited operational framework [...]
Business Rescue Applications Under Scrutiny: business rescue orders are not there for the taking!
by Eric Levenstein, Director and Head Insolvency & Business Rescue and Amy Mackechnie, Senior Associate This article considers the recent decision in [...]
The AI Arms Race and what it means for Competition Law: A new era or new focus
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of Regulatory We are not in the habit of writing breathless technology briefings. That [...]
The AI Governance Stack and South Africa’s Draft National AI Policy: An Operational Gap in Search of a Framework
by Ahmore Burger-Smidt, Director and Head of Regulatory Author's Note I am presently reading Noah M Kenney's Governing Intelligence: Law, [...]
