The Persistent Problem of Dysfunctional University Websites in South Africa
In the digital age, a university's website serves as its front door to the world—the primary point of contact for prospective students, current learners, researchers, and partners. Yet, in South Africa, many of these digital gateways are frustratingly unreliable. From frequent outages during peak registration periods to broken links and outdated content, dysfunctional university websites have become a recurring complaint. A recent audit of 290 higher education institutions across Southern Africa revealed that nearly one in five websites (50 out of 290) were entirely non-functional, with South African institutions faring better but still plagued by issues like 13% broken links and nearly a third lacking visible updates. This isn't just a technical glitch; it's a symptom of deeper systemic challenges in South African higher education's digital infrastructure.
Students attempting to apply or register often encounter 'site down' errors, while staff struggle with legacy systems that crash under load. These problems erode trust, delay critical processes, and exclude vulnerable groups, highlighting a digital divide that undermines the sector's potential.
Recent Outages: A Timeline of Disruptions
South African universities and related portals have a history of high-profile downtime. In May 2025, the Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) websites, including dhet.gov.za, were offline for over a week due to unspecified 'technical issues,' blocking access to registration data, tenders, and accreditation lists. Students at institutions like Ehlanzeni TVET College reported glitches forcing manual registrations, with leader Paris Mokoena decrying long-standing 'dysfunctional online services.'
Unisa, the University of South Africa, faced intermittent delays during January 2026 registrations due to high traffic, advising students to try later. NSFAS portals have repeatedly crashed under application volumes, stranding thousands. These incidents peak during admissions, exacerbating stress for first-year applicants.
Technical and Design Flaws: Broken Links and Outdated Content
Even when online, many sites suffer from poor maintenance. The University of Johannesburg's 2025 audit found 13% of links broken across functional sites, with 32% lacking timestamps or updates. Content is often static—brochureware rather than dynamic portals—failing to integrate research repositories (only 36% functional) or teaching resources (under 33%). Social media links are inconsistent, with many dead ends.
Monolingualism dominates: 95% English-only, ignoring South Africa's 11 official languages and excluding rural or non-English speakers. Interactivity is rare—fewer than 10% have chatbots, live support, or robust FAQs—leaving users frustrated.
Accessibility Barriers: Excluding Students with Disabilities
A 2018 study of 26 South African university homepages revealed widespread Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) non-compliance. Common errors included missing alt text for images, poor color contrast, keyboard navigation failures, and absent ARIA labels for screen readers. Only a few sites passed automated tests like WAVE or AChecker partially. This excludes visually impaired or motor-disabled students, violating equity mandates post-apartheid. For full details, see the accessibility study.
Recent audits confirm persistence, with digital divides widening for disabled students in remote areas.
Cyber Threats: Ransomware and Zero-Day Attacks
Cybersecurity lapses compound issues. In October 2025, Wits University's Oracle E-Business system fell to a global zero-day exploit, prompting patches and regulator notifications. Tshwane University of Technology suffered ransomware in February 2024, leaking data. Hackers like XP95 targeted student/jobseeker databases in 2026. Poor funding for updates leaves legacy systems vulnerable.
These attacks disrupt portals, erode data privacy, and cost millions in recovery.
Root Causes: Underfunding, Skills Gaps, and Legacy Systems
South Africa's higher education budget rose to R100.4 billion by 2026, but IT maintenance is underprioritized amid infrastructure backlogs. Universities spend heavily on personnel (93% in TVETs), leaving little for digital upgrades. Skills shortages in web development and cybersecurity persist, with legacy systems from apartheid-era silos unmodernized.
Administrative corruption diverts IT tenders, while high student volumes (1.1 million spaces vs. growing demand) overload portals. Regional inequities mirror this: SA outperforms Mozambique but lags global standards.
Impacts: From Student Stress to Institutional Reputation
Downtime delays registrations, causing missed deadlines and financial losses. Students pawn devices for fees amid NSFAS delays; portals amplify chaos. Staff waste time on workarounds, research visibility suffers (poor Webometrics for some), and global partnerships falter. Webometrics 2026 ranked UJ 491st (top SA entry), but others slipped due to weak online presence.
Exclusion hits marginalized groups hardest, perpetuating inequality.
Spotlight on SA Leaders and Laggards
Top performers like UCT, Wits, UJ, and Stellenbosch boast responsive sites, multilingual options, and strong security (per Webometrics/SimilarWeb traffic). Unisa handles massive scale but buckles under load; smaller/rural unis lag with outdated designs. DHET sites exemplify government-level failures.
Regional Context and Global Benchmarks
In the UJ audit, SA/Zimbabwe/Botswana led maintenance, but Angola/Mozambique had mass failures. Globally, top unis like Harvard integrate AI chat, full WCAG 2.2, and real-time updates—a model for SA.
Solutions: Modernization and Best Practices
Experts urge prioritizing website governance: routine audits, dedicated IT budgets (1-2% of total), staff training in WCAG/multilingual tools. Adopt cloud hosting for scalability, cybersecurity frameworks (e.g., NIST), and open-source CMS like Drupal. Regional bodies like SARUA can share resources. For more, read the full University World News analysis.
Photo by Zander Betterton on Unsplash
Future Outlook: Towards Resilient Digital Ecosystems
With AI and 4IR demands, dysfunctional sites risk obsolescence. Investments via NSFAS/DHET digital funds, public-private partnerships (e.g., Google scholarships), and policy like NEP-inspired reforms could transform SA higher ed. Proactive steps now ensure inclusivity and competitiveness.
Stakeholders must act: students advocate, unis invest, government funds. A robust digital presence isn't optional—it's essential for South Africa's knowledge economy.
