South Africa’s Constitutional Court ruled on October 3, 2025 that the previously separate maternity, partner (paternity) and adoption leaves should be consolidated into a single shared leave entitlement of four months and 10 days for reasons of birth, adoption or surrogacy, to be divided between the two parents as they see fit. The ruling took effect immediately.
The ruling primarily affects leave duration and allocation of leave between parents, greatly increasing the amount of leave available to fathers and adoptive parents. Employers must now allow parents to share the leave between themselves; they should prepare for a more flexible system that acknowledges both parents' roles. The change is a legal requirement and not a matter of company policy. Companies surveyed by WTW generally provide employees with the minimum leaves under the BCEA and the UIA provisions, but 48% top up social security maternity benefits to full pay for 16 weeks, 24% provide partner leave at full pay for 10 workdays, and 23% offer adoption leave at full pay for 87 workdays (i.e., 17.32 weeks) at the median. Employers should review and revise their family leave policies to ensure compliance with the provisional rules and to avoid discrimination.