07-07-2025
Mandatory Electronic Travel Authorisation: what all travellers need to know about South Africa's new visa system
Minister of Home Affairs, Leon Schreiber, revealed that as ETA rolls out across all ports of entry in the country, it will become mandatory for visitors.
Image: Supplied
In a bold move towards modernising the country's immigration framework, South Africa's Home Affairs Minister, Leon Schreiber, announced a comprehensive digital visa system that will soon be mandatory for all entrants to the nation.
Presenting his budget for the upcoming financial year, Schreiber stated, 'No person will be able to enter South Africa without first obtaining a digital visa through the ETA,' marking a significant shift in how the country manages immigration.
The launch of the Electronic Travel Authorisation (ETA) is set for the end of September 2025, coinciding with the G20 leaders' meeting.
According to Schreiber, the ETA will digitalise the entire visa process, enhancing efficiency and combating corruption that has plagued the traditional paper-based system.
'The endpoint of all of these reforms,' Schreiber explained, 'is to enable both South Africans and legitimate visitors to apply for and obtain enabling documents online, including in digital format, from the comfort of their own homes.'
The ETA system will first cater to travellers arriving by air at OR Tambo and Cape Town International Airports, with plans to expand to additional visa categories and ports of entry over time.
In recent months, the Department of Home Affairs (DHA) has made noteworthy strides in its reform efforts, boasting that since February 2025, over 17,000 Chinese and Indian tourists have successfully secured visas through a tailor-made online trusted tour operator scheme.
This influx of visitors has led to the creation of approximately 1 230 jobs in South Africa, according to research from Operation Vulindlela, illustrating the potential economic benefits of streamlined visa processes.
'The days of pieces of paper and handwritten visa documents are coming to an end before our eyes because we are tired of corruption, we are tired of fraud, and we are tired of illegal immigration,' Schreiber asserted.
The minister emphasised that the new system will harness machine learning and cutting-edge technology to automate the application, adjudication, and communication processes involved in obtaining a visa.