The Department of Social Development proposed a Livelihoods Support Grant to eventually replace the SRD R370 grant. The public comment period on the proposal closed 30 April 2026. No implementation date has been confirmed. The SRD R370 continues to pay beneficiaries until formal legislation is passed and a transition date is set.
Key Takeaways
- The Livelihoods Support Grant is proposed, not yet law or active
- SRD R370 (R370/month) continues until legislation formally replaces it
- The new grant would require registration as a work-seeker with the Dept of Labour
- A quarterly skills or training participation component is included in the proposal
- Beneficiaries will receive advance notice before any transition happens
What Is the Livelihoods Support Grant?
The Livelihoods Support Grant is a proposed social grant from the Department of Social Development designed to provide income support while actively connecting recipients to employment and skills pathways. Unlike the SRD R370, which has no participation requirements, the proposed Livelihoods Grant includes a work-seeker registration condition and a quarterly skills component. The public comment period closed on 30 April 2026.
Policy context: The shift from a passive income grant (SRD) to an active participation model (Livelihoods) reflects a broader policy direction in South Africa toward “active labour market programmes” — a model used in countries including Brazil and Indonesia, where conditional cash transfers showed measurable employment uptake improvements within 18–24 months of implementation.
The proposal does not yet carry the force of law. Parliament must pass enabling legislation before the grant can be implemented. SASSA has made no announcement about a transition timeline.
→ Overview of all current SASSA grants
SRD R370 vs Proposed Livelihoods Support Grant
This table compares the current SRD R370 with what is known about the proposed Livelihoods Support Grant based on the Department of Social Development’s public consultation documents (April 2026).
| Feature | SRD R370 (Current) | Proposed Livelihoods Grant |
|---|
| Monthly amount | R370 | Higher than R370 (exact amount not confirmed) |
| Eligibility age | 18–59 | Not yet confirmed |
| Income test | Monthly SARS/UIF check | Not yet confirmed |
| Application method | Online (srd.sassa.gov.za) | Not yet confirmed |
| Work-seeker registration | Not required | Required — Dept of Labour |
| Skills/training component | None | Quarterly participation required |
| Implementation date | Active now | Not confirmed — no date set |
| Legal status | Active under Social Relief of Distress provisions | Proposed — not yet law |
→ SRD R370 status check guide
What Does the Work-Seeker Registration Requirement Mean?
The proposal requires Livelihoods Grant recipients to register as work-seekers with the Department of Employment and Labour. This is a formal registration process, not a job requirement. Registering as a work-seeker means your details are added to the national employment database, making you accessible to employment programmes and placement services.
This is a significant change from the SRD R370. The SRD has no active participation requirement — you only need to show that you have no other income. The Livelihoods Grant, if passed into law, would require ongoing engagement with the labour system.
Civil society organisations that participated in the public comment process, including the Black Sash, raised concerns that the registration requirement could exclude rural beneficiaries who live far from Department of Labour offices. The Department has not yet responded to these concerns in a public statement.
What Is the Quarterly Skills Component?
The proposal includes a quarterly “skills participation” requirement. Recipients would need to participate in a qualifying skills or training activity once every three months to remain eligible. The proposal does not yet specify which activities qualify, how long they must run, or how compliance will be verified.
This component is the most uncertain part of the proposal. Until Parliament passes the legislation and SASSA publishes implementation regulations, the exact requirements remain undefined.
→ Latest SASSA news and policy updates
What Should Current SRD Beneficiaries Do Right Now?
Nothing different. Current SRD R370 beneficiaries should continue to apply or reconfirm as normal. The SRD R370 does not stop until formal legislation replaces it and SASSA sets a transition date. Any transition will come with advance public notice.
Do not:
- Cancel your SRD application in anticipation of the new grant
- Pay anyone claiming to “register” you early for the Livelihoods Grant
- Assume you will automatically qualify or be transferred to the new grant
If the Livelihoods Grant is eventually passed into law, SASSA will communicate the transition process through official channels — sassa.gov.za, the SASSA WhatsApp number, and public media.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is the SRD R370 being cancelled?
Not yet, and not imminently. The SRD R370 remains active. The Livelihoods Support Grant is a proposal that has gone through a public comment period but has not been passed into law. Until Parliament passes enabling legislation and SASSA sets a transition date, the SRD R370 continues to operate. Current beneficiaries should keep applying and reconfirming as normal. See the SRD status check guide for current processes.
When will the Livelihoods Support Grant start?
No implementation date has been confirmed. The public comment period closed 30 April 2026. The Department of Social Development must now review submissions, finalise the policy, and draft legislation for Parliament to pass. This process typically takes many months to over a year in South Africa’s legislative cycle. SASSA will publish an official announcement when a date is set.
Will I need to reapply when the Livelihoods Grant launches?
The Department of Social Development has not confirmed the application process yet. It is likely that current SRD beneficiaries will need to complete a new application or registration process, including registering as work-seekers with the Department of Labour. Beneficiaries will receive advance notice and a clear transition timeline before any deadline applies. Do not take any action until official guidance is published.
What happens to my SRD payment if I don’t register with the Department of Labour?
This cannot be answered with certainty yet because the legislation has not been passed. Under the current proposal, work-seeker registration with the Department of Labour would be a condition of receiving the Livelihoods Grant. If you did not register, you would likely not qualify for the new grant. However, the SRD R370 would still be available until formally discontinued. Once final legislation is published, SASSA will communicate exactly what each step means for existing beneficiaries.
Sources
Department of Social Development — dsd.gov.za — Livelihoods Support Grant public consultation document, April 2026
Black Sash — blacksash.org.za — Public comment submission on the Livelihoods Support Grant, April 2026
SASSA — sassa.gov.za — SRD grant status and continuity information