The Alarming Scale of Withheld Academic Records in South African Universities
In a stark revelation that underscores the deepening student debt crisis in South Africa's higher education sector, five of the country's 26 public universities are currently withholding exam results, degree certificates, and diploma parchments from 19,291 former students due to outstanding fees. This practice, common across institutions to recover unpaid balances, affects thousands of graduates who completed their studies but remain trapped without proof of their qualifications, severely limiting their entry into the job market. The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), the primary funding mechanism for low-income students, has been plagued by payment delays, administrative glitches, and funding shortfalls, exacerbating the problem of historical debt that dates back several years.
The broader context reveals a ballooning debt burden on universities. As of early 2026, public higher education institutions are grappling with billions in unpaid fees, with estimates from previous years placing the figure at R9.3 billion for debts accumulated since 2023 alone. This financial strain threatens institutional sustainability, forcing universities to adopt stringent measures like result and certificate withholding as a last resort for revenue recovery. Yet, this approach creates a vicious cycle: students cannot secure employment without credentials, perpetuating poverty and inequality in a nation where youth unemployment hovers around 46%.
Which Universities Are Most Affected and What Are the Debt Figures?
While the identities of all five universities have not been fully disclosed in initial reports, available data points to institutions with historically high debt loads. For instance, Vaal University of Technology (VUT) is withholding certificates from 6,456 students who collectively owe R177 million. Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) and Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) have been repeatedly cited among the worst affected, with combined debts contributing significantly to the national tally. Other major players include the University of the Witwatersrand (Wits), where 34,523 students owe over R2.5 billion, and the University of Pretoria (UP), with 42,856 students owing nearly R2.4 billion as of 2024 figures that have likely worsened.
| University | Students Owing Debt | Outstanding Amount (R billion) |
|---|---|---|
| University of the Witwatersrand (Wits) | 34,523 | 2.5 |
| University of Pretoria (UP) | 42,856 | 2.4 |
| Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) | N/A | High (top affected) |
| Tshwane University of Technology (TUT) | N/A | High (top affected) |
| Vaal University of Technology (VUT) | 6,456 (withheld) | 0.177 |
These numbers represent only a snapshot; Universities South Africa (USAf) has warned that the crisis is structural, with debt levels exploding due to economic pressures and NSFAS inefficiencies. By end-2024, eight universities alone reported R8.8 billion in arrears.
Understanding Historical Student Debt and NSFAS's Role
Historical student debt refers to unpaid tuition, residence, and other fees from previous academic years that accumulate when NSFAS bursaries fail to cover full costs or are disbursed late. NSFAS, established to provide financial aid to students from households earning less than R350,000 annually, funds tuition, accommodation, living expenses, and learning materials. However, systemic issues—such as verification delays, overpayments to deceased students (over 800 cases flagged), and fraud—have led to shortfalls. In 2026, NSFAS received a record 893,487 applications but faces budget constraints, potentially defunding over 100,000 students.
The process unfolds step-by-step: Students apply for NSFAS funding post-matric results. Approval triggers payments to universities, but discrepancies in household income verification or qualification eligibility often result in partial or no coverage. Families bridge gaps through loans or personal funds, but economic downturns—high inflation, unemployment—prevent repayment. Universities then classify debts as 'historical' after three years, intensifying collection efforts.
The Mechanism of Withholding: A Common University Policy
South African universities operate under autonomy granted by the Higher Education Act (1997), allowing them to set financial policies. Withholding academic records is a standard lever: exam results are blocked on student portals, graduation ceremonies proceed without certificate issuance, and transcripts are denied for job applications. This is not new; in 2024, Minister Blade Nzimande confirmed most institutions follow this practice. Institutions like Walter Sisulu University (WSU), University of the Free State (UFS), and others explicitly state that NSFAS-eligible graduates attend ceremonies but leave empty-handed until debts are cleared.
Legally, courts have mixed rulings: some view debt as evidence of poor character for professions like law, while others argue poverty should not bar access. For detailed legal analysis, see this expert discussion.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Devastating Impacts on Students, Graduates, and the Economy
The human cost is profound. Graduates like those at WSU cannot apply for jobs without physical certificates, despite completion letters often deemed insufficient by employers. This locks qualified individuals out of sectors like teaching, nursing, and engineering, worsening South Africa's skills shortage and 33% overall unemployment rate.
- Personal Toll: Mental health strain, family conflicts over fees, delayed life milestones like homeownership.
- Economic Ripple: Lost productivity; UNESCO warns of inequality entrenchment from such debt traps.
- Institutional Strain: Universities divert funds from research and infrastructure to debt chasing.
- Social Justice: Disproportionately affects black, working-class students reliant on NSFAS.
In KwaZulu-Natal alone, institutions face R130 million in arrears, mirroring national trends.
Real-World Case Studies: Stories from the Frontlines
At WSU, students protested in late 2025 over withheld results amid fee hikes. A graduate shared: "It's been a year since I graduated, but no certificate due to NSFAS shortfalls—I can't job hunt." VUT's 6,456 cases highlight tech-focused institutions' vulnerabilities. Wits protests in February 2026 demanded registration waivers for historical debt holders.
Read more on graduate struggles in Daily Maverick's coverage.
University and Stakeholder Perspectives
Universities defend withholding as essential for viability: "Debt remains a structural challenge," notes USAf. NSFAS blames verification issues, while student unions like SAUS decry "moral collapse" in funding. Minister Buti Manamela has convened DHET, USAf, and SAUS for coordinated responses.
Promising Solutions and Private Sector Interventions
Hope emerges through partnerships. Absa Bank and Feenix Trust launched initiatives in March 2026 to fund debt clearance for select graduates, unlocking job access. Experts propose: (1) Release certificates upon graduation with salary garnishee orders; (2) Extend debt prescription periods. EFF's debt cancellation bill and NSFAS reforms aim broader relief. For global benchmarks, see University World News.
Photo by Jolame Chirwa on Unsplash
Looking Ahead: Policy Reforms and Actionable Steps
As 2026 unfolds, expect intensified scrutiny on NSFAS with SIU probes recovering R1.7 billion. Students should: verify NSFAS status early, explore bursaries via AcademicJobs scholarships (internal no), appeal debts promptly, seek pro bono legal aid. Policymakers must prioritize automated payments and debt funds. A balanced approach—protecting institutions while empowering graduates—holds the key to sustainable higher education in South Africa.
