In a decisive move to tackle persistent irregularities within the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), Higher Education and Training Minister Buti Manamela has issued a directive mandating the activation of NSFAS's internal forensic unit. This unit is to collaborate closely with the Special Investigating Unit (SIU) on ongoing probes into corruption and maladministration. The announcement, made on March 30, 2026, comes amid a damning Auditor-General's report for the 2024/25 financial year, which exposed systemic failures diverting funds meant for deserving students at South Africa's public universities and Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET) colleges.
NSFAS plays a pivotal role in South Africa's higher education landscape, providing bursaries covering tuition, accommodation, living expenses, and books for low-income students pursuing qualifications at 26 public universities and 50 TVET colleges. For the 2026 academic year, NSFAS approved funding for 660,039 students, disbursing over R4.2 billion upfront to institutions. Yet, these revelations underscore how governance breakdowns have undermined this critical lifeline, potentially affecting hundreds of thousands of students' access to tertiary education.
Audit Revelations: The Scale of NSFAS Irregularities
The Auditor-General's audit delivered a 'disclaimer of opinion'—the most severe verdict—highlighting a collapse in financial controls. Key findings include payments to 822 beneficiaries listed as deceased on the Department of Home Affairs database, over 14,000 students exceeding household income thresholds, and 321 individuals double-dipping with Social Relief of Distress (SRD) grants. Additionally, tens of thousands of students with prior qualifications or failing academic progression rules continued receiving aid, pointing to flawed verification processes.
| Irregularity Type | Number Affected | Potential Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Deceased Beneficiaries Funded | 822 | Funds diverted from living students |
| Over-Income Threshold | 14,000+ | Exclusion of truly needy applicants |
| Double-Dipping SRD Grants | 321 | Duplicate public support |
| Prior Quals/Failed Progression | Tens of thousands | Perpetuation of non-performers |
Minister Manamela emphasized, "These are violations of the basic dignity of young people who came to study, not to survive a housing crisis created by the State's own dysfunction." Such lapses not only waste public resources but erode trust in the system supporting South Africa's post-school education sector.
Minister Manamela's Comprehensive Directives
The minister's instructions form a multi-pronged strategy. NSFAS must immediately deploy its forensic investigators to assist SIU probes and refer fraud cases to law enforcement. An urgent audit targets all accredited private student accommodation providers, with immediate suspensions for contract breaches. By April 30, 2026, NSFAS will deliver a remedial report outlining corrective measures, consequence management, and IT upgrades. A revised accommodation policy, bolstering accreditation and student protections, is due by month's end.
- Activate forensic unit for SIU collaboration
- Audit and suspend rogue accommodation providers
- Resolve 7,805 appeals within 70 days
- Quarterly oversight with DHET and Auditor-General
- Progress reports to Parliament
These steps prioritize 34,000 students with blocked registrations and 15,000 awaiting second-semester funding, ensuring minimal disruption at institutions like the University of Johannesburg (UJ) and Durban University of Technology (DUT).

SIU's Ongoing NSFAS Probe: Recoveries and Referrals
Under Proclamation R88 of 2022, the SIU has probed NSFAS since 2022 for corruption and maladministration. By January 2026, it recovered R1.7 billion from universities, TVETs, and unqualified beneficiaries, including R6 million from Esayidi TVET and Majuba TVET. Over 20,000 students remain under scrutiny, with 1,055 parents signing debt acknowledgments for R126 million. The SIU urges repayments and has referred cases to the National Prosecuting Authority (NPA). NSFAS's forensic activation strengthens this effort, targeting recovery and prevention.SIU NSFAS investigation page
SIU Head Andy Govender noted these funds will directly benefit legitimate students, underscoring the probe's role in safeguarding higher education funding.
Photo by Clodagh Da Paixao on Unsplash
The Student Accommodation Crisis Fueling Fraud
Private housing scandals compound NSFAS woes. Reports reveal 'ghost beds'—unoccupied spaces billed for full occupancy—and exploitative landlords near taverns, with harassment and confiscated belongings. OUTA's March 2026 investigation warned of billions at risk due to weak controls. Parliament demands forensic audits, while NSFAS shifts to direct payments and accreditation drives. At Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT), evictions over delays have sparked outrage.
Minister Manamela's policy overhaul aims to enforce standards, providing safer options for the one bed per 33 students ratio plaguing universities.
Protests Disrupt Campuses: Real-World Impacts
NSFAS delays have ignited protests at DUT (shifted online), CPUT (evictions), Sol Plaatje University, UJ, and Wits. Students demand timely allowances amid unsafe housing. These disruptions threaten academic calendars, with violence halting lectures. Vice-chancellors report cashflow strains from delayed disbursements, impacting operations at TVETs like Majuba.
X (formerly Twitter) trends like #NSFAS expose outrage, with users sharing stories of hunger and homelessness, amplifying calls for reform.
Progress Amid Turmoil: Steps Toward Stability
Despite challenges, NSFAS cleared financial backlogs, satisfied Auditor-General on four irregularities, approved a recovery strategy, and secured SARS data-sharing. The CEO search advances, with court reviews. R3.6 billion in allowances reached universities, R679 million to TVETs.
DHET's 'war room' for 2026 prepped infrastructure, though scandals persist.

Stakeholder Perspectives: Universities, Students, Experts
Universities like Stellenbosch and UCT welcome probes but urge swift resolutions to avoid debt burdens. Student bodies demand transparency, fearing merit-based exclusions. Experts, including University World News analysts, highlight NSFAS's dropout reduction impact—funded students 20% less likely to quit—but warn chronic mismanagement risks equity goals.
Photo by Den Harrson on Unsplash
- Universities: Need reliable funding flows
- Students: Prioritize dignity, safety
- Experts: Systemic IT, governance overhauls essential
Implications for South African Higher Education
These developments threaten NSFAS's mandate: bridging poverty to skills. With 597% enrollment surge to 980k, failures exacerbate inequality. Successful collaboration could recover billions, refine eligibility via biometrics/SARS integration, and model robust aid systems. Yet, delays risk 2026 dropouts, straining workforce development.Minister's full statement
Future Outlook: Rebuilding Trust in Student Funding
By April 2026 deadlines, expect policy shifts, prosecutions, and tech upgrades. Minister Manamela vows, "NSFAS is worth fighting for," committing to an efficient system. For universities and TVETs, this means stabilized partnerships; for students, assured access. Monitoring parliamentary oversight will be key to sustained reform.
Explore higher ed careers amid these changes via higher education jobs or career advice resources.
