Gauteng’s matric class of 2025 has delivered matric results that the province can be proud of. With a pass rate of 89.06%, Gauteng has secured third place nationally, reinforcing its position as one of South Africa’s strongest education performers in a year that has rewritten the country’s matric record books.
As the national spotlight turns to the historic 88% overall National Senior Certificate pass rate, Gauteng Education MEC Matome Chiloane has publicly congratulated learners, teachers, parents, and communities for the collective effort behind the province’s achievement.
“This result reflects the work learners have put in and the support that has been provided to schools,” Chiloane said, adding that sustained cooperation between schools, parents, and communities remains critical to building on this momentum.
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Gauteng’s 2025 Matric Performance in Context
The 2025 matric results mark a defining moment for South African education. For the first time in history, the national pass rate has crossed the 88% mark, signalling growing system stability and improved learner participation.
Provincially, the rankings tell a competitive but encouraging story:
- KwaZulu-Natal emerged as the top-performing province with a 90.6% pass rate
- Free State followed closely with 89.33%
- Gauteng placed third with 89.06%
- North West recorded 88.49%
- Western Cape followed with 88.20%
For Gauteng, this result reflects consistency rather than a once-off spike. The province continues to perform at a high level despite its large learner population and complex urban challenges.
Chiloane’s Message: Progress Must Be Protected
While celebrating the results, Chiloane issued a firm reminder that progress can easily be undone without shared responsibility. He raised concerns about school vandalism during the holidays, revealing that nearly 30 Gauteng schools were damaged during the break.
“In that way, we preserve progress instead of finding ourselves dealing with vandalism of property,” Chiloane said. “Overall, there is progress and light at the end of the tunnel, and I believe we will ultimately get to a 100% pass rate.”
His remarks highlight a broader truth: education outcomes do not exist in isolation. Safe, respected, and protected school environments remain essential to sustaining gains in learner performance.
A National Perspective on Historic Results
At the national announcement, Basic Education Minister Siviwe Gwarube described the 2025 results as evidence of a system slowly finding its footing.
“These results tell a clear story,” Gwarube said. “The system is more stable, participation is improving, inclusion is expanding, and integrity is holding firm.”
She emphasised that while progress is evident at matric level, long-term success depends on strengthening foundations earlier in the schooling system, particularly in early childhood development and learner support.
“Without strong foundations in the early years, inequity will always return later,” she warned, stressing the importance of sustained investment and patience in education reform.
Why Gauteng’s Result Matters
For Gauteng, the 89% pass rate carries significance beyond rankings. As South Africa’s most populous province and economic hub, Gauteng educates a large and diverse learner cohort, including many from under-resourced communities.
Strong matric outcomes in the province:
- Improve access to universities, TVET colleges, and learnerships
- Strengthen the future skills pipeline for Gauteng’s economy
- Reduce long-term youth unemployment risks
- Reflect the effectiveness of district-level education management
Another milestone in 2025 was that all 75 school districts nationally achieved pass rates above 80%, a key quality indicator that shows improvement spreading across the system rather than remaining isolated in top-performing schools.

The Role of Communities, Parents, and Schools
Both Chiloane and Gwarube highlighted that matric success is built over years, not months. It requires alignment between households, schools, and the government.
Gwarube acknowledged the daily work behind the numbers. “These outcomes are built day by day, term by term, year by year – and we honour the work behind them.”
For Gauteng, where schools operate in densely populated urban spaces, community involvement plays an especially important role. Protecting school infrastructure, supporting learners at home, and reinforcing the value of education remain essential ingredients for continued success.
What Comes Next for Gauteng’s Class of 2025
For thousands of Gauteng matriculants, the focus now shifts from results to next steps. An 89% pass rate means more learners than ever are eligible for higher education and training opportunities.
Learners are encouraged to:
- Finalise university and college applications
- Explore TVET colleges, learnerships, and skills programmes
- Seek career guidance where results do not align with initial plans
- Use re-marking, upgrading, and second-chance options where needed
Education officials have reiterated that multiple pathways exist beyond matric, and that one set of results does not define a learner’s future.
A Province Moving Forward, Carefully
Gauteng’s 2025 matric performance reflects steady progress rather than complacency. The province remains within touching distance of top national performers while navigating challenges such as school safety, infrastructure strain, and socio-economic inequality.
As Chiloane noted, progress must be preserved, protected, and built upon.
Celebrate the Achievement, Protect the Progress
Gauteng’s matric class of 2025 has shown what is possible when effort, support, and accountability come together. Now is the time for communities, parents, and leaders to protect school spaces, support young people, and keep education at the centre of provincial development.
