In a significant development for gender equality in housing, the Socio-Economic Rights Institute of South Africa (SERI) has launched two new series of research briefs examining women's access to rental housing and formal property rights, with a particular focus on inner-city Johannesburg. Released on May 7, 2026, these publications shed light on persistent barriers that prevent many women, especially Black women from low-income backgrounds, from securing stable tenure despite post-apartheid legal reforms. The briefs are part of SERI's broader Women's Spaces project, which analyzes land and housing issues through a women's equality lens across sub-Saharan Africa.
The launch event featured presentations by researchers Lauren Royston and Nolwazi Mahlangu, alongside discussions with experts like Matthew Wilhelm-Solomon and Freedah Motshwane. Attendees included representatives from the Department of Human Settlements and the Gauteng Rental Housing Tribunal, highlighting the potential for collaborative policy action. This timely research comes amid ongoing debates about urban land reform and rental market inequities in South Africa, where women head approximately 42% of households but face disproportionate challenges in housing stability.
Historical Roots of Inequality in Property Access
South Africa's registered property system, managed through the national deeds registry, contrasts sharply with informal 'off-register' arrangements prevalent among many women. The first series of briefs traces the origins of these disparities back to colonial and apartheid eras. The Natives Land Act of 1913 restricted African land ownership to just 8% of the country, while the 1936 Native Trust and Land Act increased it marginally to 13%, but on inferior land. The Group Areas Act of 1950 enforced racial segregation, leading to forced removals, and the Prevention of Illegal Squatting Act of 1951 criminalized informal living, enabling demolitions.
Post-1994 reforms, including the Constitution's Section 25 (property rights) and Section 26 (adequate housing), the Restitution of Land Rights Act, Prevention of Illegal Eviction Act (PIE), and Rental Housing Act, aimed to redress these injustices. Yet, as the briefs detail, colonial legacies persist: in sectional title schemes, women own 32% solely, 40% jointly, and men 23% solely, per the 2017 Land Audit. Agricultural land remains 72% White-owned. Black women encounter compounded racial, class, and gender barriers in governance, finance, and inheritance, often sidelined in male-dominated body corporates or facing discriminatory lending.
Barriers to Title Deeds and Secure Tenure
Obtaining registered title deeds remains elusive for many women. Structural issues like complex administrative processes, high costs, and lack of awareness hinder registration, particularly for those in subsidized housing. Intersectional factors—race, marital status, migration, caregiving—exacerbate this: widows or single mothers struggle with inheritance claims under customary law clashing with formal systems. The briefs note how low-income women in urban areas prefer sectional titles for convenience but endure marginalization, with their maintenance concerns dismissed.
For deeper insights into these historical and contemporary barriers, the full brief is available here.
Losing Homes to Indebtedness: A Gendered Trap
Indebtedness poses a severe threat, with aggressive lending practices—high interest, hidden fees—pushing households into distress. By 2009, SERVCON managed 33,000 distressed properties, disposing of only 14,000 amid economic woes. Women, reliant on precarious jobs and bearing caregiving burdens, are hit hardest. Upon widowhood, income loss triggers defaults, with scant lender relief. Consultations from 2020-2023 reveal widespread unawareness of arrears or rights, accelerating sales in execution and evictions, risking homelessness for female-headed households.
The Rental Landscape in Johannesburg's Inner City
Johannesburg's inner city, home to diverse low-income renters, exemplifies rental inequities. Disputes stem from insecure tenure, informal verbal agreements, unaffordable hikes, substandard conditions, and power imbalances. Women, often household heads, endure these disproportionately: 2023 data shows female-headed households spending over 50% of income on rent, versus lower for men. Informal leases lack protections, exposing tenants to arbitrary evictions or harassment.
Common Rental Disputes and Resolution Challenges
Disputes include non-payment (amid poverty), maintenance neglect, illegal evictions, deposit disputes, and utility overcharges. Statutory mechanisms like the Rental Housing Tribunal offer remedies, but access barriers—costs, delays, documentation—limit effectiveness, especially for women juggling childcare. Judicial routes via PIE Act require 'just and equitable' considerations but favor landlords in practice. Non-court options, like community mediation, fill gaps but lack enforcement.
Gendered Dimensions: Heightened Vulnerabilities
Rental woes amplify for women through safety fears amid South Africa's GBV epidemic (affecting ~7.8 million women). Landlords exploit vulnerabilities with threats, lockouts, or coercive control; shared facilities invite harassment. Case studies from Hillbrow and Berea illustrate: single mothers fear nighttime assaults in unlit buildings, migrant women endure surveillance by sublettors, and overcrowding forces risky choices. Childcare burdens prevent tribunal attendance, perpetuating cycles.
Explore the gendered dimensions further in SERI's dedicated brief here.
The Hidden Costs of Being a Woman Renter
Six gendered costs emerge: heightened GBV risks prompting premium payments for 'safer' units; unsafe environments (no locks, lighting) demanding personal security measures; infrastructure failures (water cuts, fire hazards) burdening women with health management; caregiving proximity needs inflating rents; financial pressures from unstable incomes leading to debt; and mental/physical health tolls from stress and poor conditions. These cumulatively make renting costlier for women, trapping them in precariousness.
Details on these costs are outlined in this brief.
Case Studies from the Ground
Lived experiences underscore realities. In one case, a woman in an overcrowded Berea building faced eviction threats sans lease, sharing toilets with men amid hygiene crises. Another migrant mother in Hillbrow avoided complaints fearing retaliation in male-dominated tenant meetings. These illustrate how informality and gender hierarchies silence women, prioritizing survival over rights assertion.
Stakeholder Perspectives and Policy Gaps
The Tribunal's marketing and fraud units show promise, but enforcement lags. Experts call for gender-sensitive training, streamlined processes, and affordable legal aid. Broader gaps include urban land reform definitions, pro-poor prioritization, and intersectional monitoring. SERI urges coherent programs aligning mandates for equitable access.
- Define 'equitable land access' with clear principles.
- Prioritize women's needs in inheritance, titling.
- Strengthen oversight in lending, evictions.
- Promote gender-responsive rental regulations.
Implications and Future Outlook
These briefs reveal that while women lead urban homeownership (38% sole owners per recent audits), rental and formal tenure gaps persist for the poorest, especially in inner cities. With urban migration rising, addressing these could boost economic empowerment, reduce GBV, and fulfill constitutional rights. SERI's work signals momentum for reforms, urging government-civil society partnerships. As South Africa eyes 2030 Sustainable Development Goals, prioritizing women's housing security is pivotal for inclusive growth.
For professionals in research or policy, opportunities abound in South Africa's evolving housing sector. Explore related roles via AcademicJobs' South Africa listings.
