Every South African citizen is entitled to an identity document. If Home Affairs is delaying your ID application without reason, you can approach the court for a mandamus order compelling them to act.
FreeSouth African Law1 related guide
Direct Answer
Every South African citizen has the right to an identity document under Section 5 of the Identification Act. Home Affairs must process your application within a reasonable time. Unreasonable delays are a violation of your right to administrative justice under PAJA and can be challenged in court. The SAHRC can also intervene.
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“Every citizen of the Republic is entitled to be issued with an identity document by the Director-General.”
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
Section 6
“Any person may institute proceedings for the review of an administrative action — including unreasonable delay in taking a decision.”
Constitution of South Africa
Section 20
“No citizen may be deprived of citizenship.”
What to Do
Step-by-Step Guide
1Apply at your nearest Home Affairs office with both parents' IDs or birth certificates (for late registration of birth), your own ID if available, and two passport photos.
2Get a tracking reference number. Track your application online at dha.gov.za or via the Home Affairs WhatsApp line.
3If delayed beyond 8 weeks, visit the office and ask in writing for the status of your application and the reason for the delay. Keep copies of all correspondence.
4If no satisfactory response, lodge a complaint with the Public Protector (0800 112 040) or the SAHRC (011 877 3600), both of which have successfully intervened in Home Affairs delays.
5As a last resort, apply to the High Court for a mandamus — a court order compelling Home Affairs to process your application. Legal Aid can assist qualifying persons.
What to Say
Exact Words to Use
“"I applied for my identity document on [date] with reference number [X]. It has now been [Y] weeks without resolution. In terms of the Identification Act and PAJA, I am entitled to a decision within a reasonable time. Please provide written reasons for the delay and a commitment date for resolution within 5 business days."”
Tone: In writing to the Home Affairs Regional Office
Now practise saying it. The Advocate has a scenario that walks you through exactly this situation — phrase by phrase, with audio playback and a practice drill. Free to try.
It is very difficult. Most employers require an ID for PAYE registration, and banks require ID for account opening under FICA. An Acknowledgement of Receipt from Home Affairs (the slip given when you apply) can serve as interim proof in some contexts — but it is limited. Prioritise getting your ID resolved urgently.
Knowing the law is step one. The Advocate trains you to use it — with 149 real South African scenarios, exact rebuttals, law references, and Scripture. Free to start.