For many South Africans, renewing a driver’s license is a routine yet frustrating experience, not only because of long queues and outdated systems but also due to the costs involved. While motorists may assume their renewal fees are used primarily for producing the physical license card, recent insights suggest otherwise.
According to Werner Koekemoer, a former driving license project manager, only a fraction of the total license renewal fee is spent on producing the actual card. Speaking during a radio interview, Koekemoer explained that although motorists might pay between R250 to R300 for a license renewal, the cost of manufacturing the card itself is estimated at no more than R50 to R60.
“The full amount you pay for a license application or renewal is not allocated to production,” he said, implying that the majority of the funds are redirected toward state revenue rather than service delivery or improvements in road safety infrastructure.
The Bigger Picture: Revenue Over Reform?
Rob Handfield-Jones, managing director of Driving.co.za, echoed Koekemoer’s claims, stating that the continued use of physical license cards is largely due to the steady revenue stream they generate for the government. According to him, there are no substantial technical barriers preventing South Africa from moving to a digital licensing system.
“The real issue,” Handfield-Jones pointed out, “is the Road Traffic Management Corporation’s unwillingness to relinquish the income that comes from the current paper-based system.” He also highlighted that the insistence on maintaining physical cards serves vested interests and undermines efforts to improve road safety.
Despite the mandatory renewal system, Handfield-Jones argues that there is no evidence linking it to improved driver safety. In fact, he notes that 1998—just before renewals became mandatory—was South Africa’s safest year on the roads. Since then, road fatalities have reportedly quadrupled, casting doubt on the system’s effectiveness.
A Deeper Root to Road Fatalities
Handfield-Jones believes that a major contributor to South Africa’s road carnage is a licensing system that, post-1996, weakened driving standards. He links the rise in accidents to the scrapping of the Instructor’s Test and the shift to a centralized booking system, which, he says, allowed corruption and substandard training to thrive.
“No other factors account for the sharp spike in fatality rates between 1998 and 2006,” he stated, referencing a clear departure from the previous downward trend in road deaths from 1985 onward.
Outdated Machinery and Administrative Delays
Compounding the issue is South Africa’s reliance on a single, outdated license card printing machine that has been in service well beyond its intended lifespan. Frequent breakdowns have led to backlogs and frustration among motorists.
Plans to replace the aging machine recently hit a legal snag. Idemia Identity and Security South Africa, the company selected to supply the new equipment, failed to meet key technical requirements during the tender process. The matter is now before the courts, as Transport Minister Barbara Creecy awaits a declaratory order that will determine the project’s next steps.
Where Does the Money Go?
Component | Estimated Cost (R) | Notes |
---|---|---|
License card production | 50–60 | Actual physical card manufacturing |
Administrative and state revenue | 190–250 | Bulk of the fee goes into general state funding |
Modernization and infrastructure upgrade | 0 (currently stalled) | Delays in replacing outdated systems and machinery |
The recurring cost of renewing a driver’s license in South Africa appears to do little in improving driver safety, streamlining service delivery, or even ensuring modern infrastructure. As it stands, the majority of the fees motorists pay seem to be funnelled into state revenue rather than reform. Without transparency, technological upgrades, and a stronger emphasis on road safety education and training, South Africa risks perpetuating a costly cycle with little public benefit.
Driver’s Licence: A Fee Without Reform
While South Africans continue to pay hundreds of rands to renew their driver’s licences, it’s become increasingly clear that the system prioritises revenue generation over meaningful reform. With only a small portion of the fee going toward the actual production of the card, and the rest absorbed into state coffers, motorists are left funding a process that offers little in terms of road safety improvements or service efficiency. Until government authorities address outdated infrastructure, eliminate vested interests, and modernise the licensing system, the renewal fee will remain a symbol of a broken system rather than a tool for progress.
Related article: South Africa’s Driver’s Licence Machine Fixed, But Another Problem Remains