Insurance Frameworks, Policy Structuring &
Statutory Portfolios
1. (Compulsory) Insurance
South African regulatory frameworks enforce specific compulsory social insurance systems to
preserve baseline economic safety across society:
• Unemployment Insurance Fund (UIF): Provides immediate short-term financial relief for
employees experiencing unexpected job loss, illness, or maternity periods. Funded via a
statutory 2% payroll levy on gross wages, split evenly (1% from employee, 1% from
employer). The current maximum earnings ceiling is capped at R17,712 per month. Full
benefits require at least 4 years of consistent contributions. Legislative updates include
expanded parental leaves (10 consecutive days for fathers/same-sex partners, adoptions
under age 2, and surrogacy arrangements) and mandatory inclusion of civil servants, foreign
nationals, and domestic workers. Exclusions remain for workers working less than 24 hours
monthly, commission-only earners and Government employees.
• Compensation for Occupational Injuries and Diseases Act (COIDA): A mandatory
corporate-funded safety framework protecting employees against workplace-acquired
illnesses, temporary/permanent operational disabilities, or fatal work-related injuries
(allowing dependents to claim). Companies must report occurrences immediately, providing
documentation within 7 days. Exclusions apply to private-sector domestic workers, members
of the South African Police Service (SAPS), and the National Defence Force (SANDF).
Claims are automatically invalidated if submitted more than 12 months post-incident.
• Road Accident Fund (RAF): A compulsory program funded via a dedicated levy built
directly into petrol and diesel prices. It covers comprehensive medical rehabilitation,
hospitalization, and financial payouts for all injured South African road users, alongside loss-
of income support for dependents in fatal motor vehicle accident cases.
2. Non-Compulsory Insurance:
Voluntary risk mitigation profiles are managed selectively depending on corporate or individual
exposure requirements:
• Business & Commercial: Insures business premises against loss via burglary, theft,
natural disasters, and public third-party liabilities. Includes business interruption coverage to
cushion partial or total operational revenue losses when incidents hamper business
productivity. Fire policies insure the facility against fires, while the specific 'Iron Safe Clause'
mandates maintaining an accurate, updated physical inventory ledger stored offsite or in
fireproof enclosures to validate losses. It is important to note that the premiums will be
higher for more flammable structures/ buildings.
1