The Spark of Protest at University of Pretoria's Hatfield Campus
On March 9, 2026, dozens of students from the University of Pretoria (UP) gathered outside the Hatfield Campus in Pretoria, South Africa, to voice their frustration over escalating accommodation costs. Led by the Economic Freedom Fighters Youth Command (EFFYC) at UP, the peaceful demonstration highlighted a growing crisis where private landlords are allegedly demanding top-up fees of up to R1,500 per month on top of the National Student Financial Aid Scheme (NSFAS) accommodation allowance. These top-ups force many NSFAS-funded students—primarily from low-income backgrounds—to dip into their meager meal allowances, leading to hunger and academic disruption.
The protest comes amid broader challenges in South Africa's higher education sector, where student housing shortages and misaligned funding caps exacerbate financial strain. EFFYC UP chairman Nxongotelo Mgabini emphasized that students are being denied basic dignity, with some providers charging R5,400 for shared rooms despite the NSFAS cap of R5,200 monthly. This misalignment leaves black students, in particular, vulnerable, as one protester noted: 'We need capped prices... Black students are still suffering. We don't have food.'

Understanding NSFAS: The Backbone of Student Financial Support
The NSFAS, established in 1991 as the National Student Financial Aid Scheme, provides comprehensive bursaries to eligible South African students from households earning less than R350,000 annually. For 2026, NSFAS approved funding for over 1.24 million students, disbursing more than R6.3 billion in allowances, including tuition, accommodation, meals, books, and travel. Accommodation allowances are paid directly to accredited private providers via the NSFAS Student Housing Portal, aiming to prevent mismanagement.
However, the allowance is capped—typically R5,200 per month for urban areas like Pretoria—based on regional cost benchmarks. Providers must register properties, undergo accreditation by NSFAS panels, and adhere to strict rules: no deposits, no admin fees, and no top-ups from students. Violations can lead to defunding, yet enforcement gaps persist, especially in high-demand areas near UP.
- Full coverage for registered students at public universities and TVET colleges.
- Direct payments to accredited landlords starting February 2026.
- Upfront allowances issued on February 1, covering one month's accommodation plus other essentials.
The Top-Up Fee Dilemma: Why R1,500 Matters
In Pretoria's Hatfield area, student accommodation rents average R4,000 to R8,500 monthly for basic shared rooms, far exceeding NSFAS caps in many cases. UP's on-campus residences charge R65,700 to R92,300 annually (about R5,500-R7,700 monthly) plus meals, but limited spots push thousands to private options. Landlords justify top-ups by citing rising utilities, maintenance, and market rates, but students argue this exploits NSFAS dependency.
Step-by-step, the process unfolds: Students apply via the NSFAS portal, select accredited housing, and receive allowances. If rent exceeds the cap, providers demand the difference upfront or withhold services, threatening blacklists that block future housing. With meal allowances at R1,700 monthly, students often skip meals—R1,500 covers just one top-up, leaving R200 for food.
Voices from the Frontlines: Student Struggles and EFFYC Demands
Nxongotelo Mgabini of EFFYC UP rallied protesters, stating, 'UP students don't have human dignity... These private accommodations must follow a circular from NSFAS.' The group demands immediate NSFAS intervention, provider delisting for violations, and no blacklisting of defaulters relying on allowances. Social media amplified calls, with Instagram posts announcing 'shutdowns' of non-compliant residences.
Personal stories reveal depth: First-year engineering students report using book allowances for rent, derailing studies. Broader impacts include mental health strain, dropout risks, and inequality—affluent peers secure on-campus spots, while NSFAS recipients face precarity.
Stakeholder Perspectives: UP, NSFAS, and Landlords Weigh In
UP spokesperson Rikus Delport acknowledged the issue: 'The accommodation allowance provided by NSFAS does not always align with rental rates... resulting in top-ups from meal allowances.' The university is engaging its Student Representative Council (SRC) and urging reports to financial aid offices. NSFAS's Ishmael Mnisi stressed accreditation rules but noted UP's independent management: 'Report to the university’s financial aid office.'
Landlords, via associations, claim NSFAS caps ignore inflation (15-20% rent hikes in 2025-2026). Private Housing Student Association pushes for cap increases, citing R62 million in unpaid arrears previously. A balanced view requires negotiation: higher caps vs. stricter compliance.
Historical Echoes: Protests Past and Present
This isn't new—2023 saw nationwide shutdowns over a R45,000 annual cap (R3,750 monthly), with UP students sleeping outside campuses. Caps rose to ~R52,000 yearly (R4,300+ monthly) by 2025, then R5,200 for 2026 urban zones, but Pretoria's boom (UP's 50,000+ students) outpaces supply.
Timeline: Jan 2026 funding approvals; Feb disbursements; March protests as realities hit.
South Africa's Student Housing Shortage: A National Crisis
SA faces a 500,000+ bed deficit across universities/TVETs, with one bed per 33 students in some areas. UP, with ~55,000 students (20-30% NSFAS-funded, est. 10,000-15,000), struggles amid 1.7 million tertiary enrollees. Urban migration to Pretoria inflates rents 10-15% yearly.
| City | Avg Student Rent (2026) | NSFAS Cap |
|---|---|---|
| Pretoria (UP) | R5,000-R8,000 | R5,200 |
| Johannesburg (Wits) | R5,200-R7,000 | R5,200 |
| Cape Town (UCT) | R6,000-R10,000 | R5,500 |
Potential Solutions: From Policy to Practical Steps
Government eyes R54.3 billion NSFAS budget for 2026, prioritizing housing pilots. Proposals: Raise caps regionally, expand accreditation, public-private builds (e.g., 50,000 new beds by 2030). UP could subsidize top-ups via endowments.
- Report violations to NSFAS portal.
- Prioritize on-campus apps (reservation R5,700).
- Explore higher ed career paths for self-funding post-grad.
Students: Budget via apps, share rooms, seek bursaries. Providers: Comply for steady NSFAS payments.
Photo by Antoinette Plessis on Unsplash
Future Outlook and Actionable Insights for Stakeholders
With NSFAS disbursing R63 billion in 2026, reforms like AI-driven matching and inflation-linked caps loom. UP commits support; expect SRC mediation. For career growth amid challenges, check rate my professor for UP insights or higher ed career advice.
Balanced progress demands collaboration—protests spotlight issues, but dialogue drives change. Students, explore university jobs or higher ed jobs for stability.
