Your savings just got a major boost from the government. Now’s the time to make the most of it.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
There has never been a better time to be a saver in South Africa! From 1 March 2026, the government increased the amount you can invest in a tax-free savings (TFSA) or Tax-Free Fixed Deposit account from R36 000 to R46 000 a year- and what’s great about this investment is, every rand of interest you earn, is yours to keep. No income tax. No capital gains tax. Just your money, growing for you. If you already have a TFSA, this is your signal to do more with it. If you don’t have one yet, consider this your introduction to one of the smartest savings tools available to South Africans – and now is the perfect moment to start. Here’s why: 1. The new limit is your chance to grow faster The higher annual TFSA contribution limit means that, if you can contribute the full amount every year, you can reach the R500 000 lifetime limit in around 11 years (three years sooner than before). That unlocks more years for all that money you’ve saved (and already earned interest on) to grow, tax free. “Time is your ally when it comes to tax-free savings” explains Sisandile Nkatu, Head of Retail Investments at Nedbank. “The sooner you start, the sooner your money starts working for you – without the taxman taking a share.” 2. You don’t need R46 000 to start The most common reason people don’t open a TFSA is that they think they can’t afford to save the full allowed amount every year. “You don’t need to be able to save the full R46 000 per year, you can start with Just R250 “Nkatu explains. “Every rand you put in grows tax-free, compounding year on year.” So, don’t wait – start now, and try to increase contributions when you can.” 3. A TFSA is not a savings account you dip into This is perhaps the biggest misunderstanding about TFSAs. You can withdraw money at any time, but you shouldn’t. Whatever you take out, permanently reduces your lifetime contribution limit. That money can never go back in! So, if you withdraw R20 000 for a