SASSA SRD Declined — What It Means and How to Fix It
In February 2026 alone, over 1.2 million SRD applications were declined. According to the Institute for Economic Justice, roughly 68% of those declines involved people who likely qualified but were caught by automated screening errors. A decline is not always the end — most can be appealed and fixed.
You have 90 days from the date of decline to appeal. After 90 days, that month is permanently closed. If you were declined for multiple months, you must appeal each one separately.
The most common decline reasons — and what to do
SASSA checks your bank accounts and SARS records every month. If any deposit — including a family transfer, stokvel payout, refund, or reversal — pushes your total above R624, you are automatically declined for that month.
This is the most frustrating decline reason. If you were ever formally employed, your employer registered you with UIF. Even if you left that job years ago and have never claimed UIF benefits, SASSA's system flags you as potentially receiving UIF — and declines you.
If you are registered with NSFAS as a current or former student, SASSA considers you as already receiving government support and declines your SRD.
Your name, surname, or date of birth on the SRD application doesn't match Department of Home Affairs records. This can happen after a name change (marriage/divorce) or if there's a typo in your original application.
SASSA requires your bank account to be in your own name. If someone else's account is linked to your application, or your account details changed, payments will fail and the application may be declined.
How to appeal — step by step
Visit srd.sassa.gov.za/appeals. Only use this official site — never pay anyone to appeal on your behalf.
Use the same phone number you used when you originally applied. SASSA will send an OTP to verify your identity — enter it quickly, it expires fast.
Each declined month is a separate appeal. If you were declined for March, April, and May — submit three separate appeals. Do all of them within the 90-day window.
Don't write "I disagree." Write specifically: "I was retrenched from [Company] on [date]. The deposit shown is a one-off stokvel payout received from my savings club, not employment income." Match your reason to the decline reason shown.
Bank statements, a UIF non-payment letter, NSFAS completion letter, or a sworn affidavit from a commissioner of oaths (free at police stations). Specific evidence beats a generic affidavit every time.
Screenshot your confirmation page. You will need this reference number if you need to follow up with SASSA or ITSAA on 012 312 7727 or grantappeals@dsd.gov.za.
What happens after you appeal?
Your appeal goes to the Independent Tribunal for Social Assistance Appeals (ITSAA) — a separate body from SASSA. ITSAA takes 60–90 days to review. You will receive an SMS with one of two outcomes:
SASSA pays backpay for that month within 5–10 business days, deposited directly to your bank account.
The decision is final for that month. You can still reapply in the next SRD cycle. Contact Legal Aid SA (0800 110 110) if you believe an error was made.
Key contacts
SRD status & appeals portal: srd.sassa.gov.za
ITSAA (appeals tribunal): 012 312 7727
ITSAA email: grantappeals@dsd.gov.za
Legal Aid SA (free legal help): 0800 110 110
This guide provides general information only. For official SASSA information visit sassa.gov.za. Mzansi Money Guide is independent and not affiliated with SASSA.