The Overwhelming Demand at UJ
The University of Johannesburg exemplifies the intensity of the student accommodation crisis. For 2026, UJ processed 99,472 applications for residence placement, yet its on-campus capacity stands at just 7,015 beds. By early February 2026, only 6,312 students had been accepted, with full occupancy expected by the end of registration. Dr. Nell Ledwaba, UJ's Senior Director for Student Affairs, noted that this trend mirrors broader national pressures in higher education.
To bridge the gap, UJ partners with accredited private providers, adding 31,505 off-campus beds. Residence fees range from R39,676 for self-catered options to R70,616 for catered ones, calibrated to NSFAS allowances. First-year students, who form the bulk of applicants, undergo a phased selection prioritizing academic merit, financial need, and proximity to home. Despite these efforts, the ratio of applicants to beds—over 14:1—forces many to seek private rentals in Johannesburg's inner city, where costs can exceed budgets and safety concerns loom large.
This scenario at UJ reflects years of enrollment growth; the university now serves over 50,000 students, fueled by expanded access programs post-apartheid. Without swift infrastructure investment, the pressure will intensify as matriculants qualifying for university spots rise annually.Similar Strains Across Major Universities
The crisis extends beyond UJ to other leading institutions. At the University of Cape Town (UCT), approximately 11,000 eligible students applied for accommodation in 2026, with 8,700 beds available in on-campus and leased facilities—a 500-bed increase from prior years, accommodating 79% of applicants. Elijah Moholola, UCT spokesperson, emphasized the university's incremental progress, up 31% in capacity since 2016, yet demand persists due to the institution's prestige and limited space on Table Mountain slopes. The University of Pretoria (UP) reports over 21,998 first-year applications against 8,000+ on-campus beds, supplemented by off-campus partnerships. Lanché van Tonder from UP's Residence Management highlighted regulatory hurdles slowing expansion. Wits University in Johannesburg maintains stable operations but faces similar off-campus reliance, with residence fees rising modestly by 4.2% for 2026. In the Western Cape, the University of the Western Cape (UWC) announced a major expansion, adding over 5,000 beds to reach 16,000 total, one of the largest boosts among public universities. Stellenbosch University navigates NSFAS delays and high local rents, while Cape Peninsula University of Technology (CPUT) sees students queuing amid placement uncertainties. Nationally, universities house only about 140,000 students in managed residences against a total enrollment nearing 1 million.Root Causes: Explosive Enrollment vs. Stagnant Supply
Several factors fuel South Africa's student accommodation crisis. Enrollment has surged due to democratic access gains; over 600,000 disadvantaged students received NSFAS approval in 2025, with 660,000 cleared for 2026. Yet, building new residences is capital-intensive, requiring R500,000–R1 million per bed, plus zoning approvals and 2–5 year timelines. Public universities prioritize academics over housing, constrained by budgets. The Department of Higher Education and Training (DHET) aims for 300,000 beds via infrastructure grants, but progress lags. Urban land scarcity around campuses exacerbates issues, pushing development outward and raising transport costs for commuters.- Increased matric pass rates and no-fee school expansions boost qualifiers.
- NSFAS expansion without housing foresight creates mismatches.
- Municipal delays and rising construction costs hinder builds.
Devastating Impacts on Students and Education
The human cost is profound. Thousands sleep in lecture halls, SRC offices, or streets, as seen at CPUT and UCT. Rural students face heightened vulnerability, traveling long distances or dropping out; nearly a third report hunger amid housing woes. Unsafe off-campus digs expose risks: crime, poor sanitation, exploitative landlords. Academic performance suffers—commutes erode study time, stress disrupts focus. Walter Sisulu University rejected 500,000 applicants partly due to infrastructure deficits. Equity goals falter, widening divides between privileged and poor students.NSFAS: Funding Boom Amid Accommodation Woes
The National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS), funding tuition, living costs, and housing for low-income students, approved R65,993 for metro catered residences in 2025. For 2026, it processed 194,069 accommodation claims but blames providers for shortfalls leading to homelessness. Delays in payouts strain landlords, prompting evictions. NSFAS urges reporting issues and sets private rates, yet mismatches persist. Students must submit verified accommodation details post-placement, complicating processes.Private Sector and PPPs: Emerging Lifelines
Private providers fill voids, with UJ's 31,505 extra beds exemplifying accreditation models ensuring safety and NSFAS compatibility. Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) gain traction; DHET promotes them for scalable builds.
Investors eye the market—shortfall exceeds 500,000 beds—with yields from purpose-built halls. Challenges include affordability; PPPs must cap rents. Examples: Eris Property near Wits, new UCT developments.
- Accreditation verifies fire safety, security, proximity.
- PPPs share risks: government land, private funding.
- Blended finance attracts impact investors.
