In January 2025, President Cyril Ramaphosa signed the Expropriation Bill into law. The Expropriation Act of 2024 repeals the 1975 legislation and establishes processes and procedures for expropriation of property by the State.
The Expropriation Act seeks to align expropriation legislation with the Constitution. Section 25 of the Constitution has always permitted expropriation, where it is for a public purpose and ordinarily subject to compensation. The Expropriation Act 2024 clarifies, what some commentators feel is implicit in section 25, when land may be expropriated without compensation.
The key provisions of the Expropriation Act, 2024 include:
Accordingly, expropriation without public purpose, compensation or where there has not been attempted negotiations is unlawful.
The legislation does not provide for arbitrary deprivation of property by the State. It rather seeks to align existing legislation with the Constitution and clarifies the regulations surrounding the government’s capacity and ability to expropriate.
Director – Corporate and
Commercial
Email: anton.schelhase@bdplaw.co.za
Cell: (+27)82 468 1824
Director – Corporate and
Commercial
Email: andrea.keller@bdplaw.co.za
Cell: (+27)82 821 5054
Director – Corporate and
Commercial
Email: caleb.jones@bdplaw.co.za
Cell: (+27)69 4488 944
Andy Alexander
Andy holds an LLB from the University of the Western Cape. He is currently completing his articles of clerkship at BDP Attorneys under John Smit and Rosshin Rossouw.
Gaenor Michel
Gaenor holds a BA, a BA Hons (cum laude), an LLB and an MA (cum laude) from the University of Stellenbosch. Her MA thesis focussed on wrongful life delictual actions and the ethical desirability thereof. She is currently completing her articles of clerkship at BDP Attorneys under Christo Potgieter and John Smit. Gaenor is also a registered PhD student at Stellenbosch University, working towards a PhD in the field of Bioethics.