Receiving an eviction notice is frightening, but in KwaZulu-Natal no landlord can evict you without a court order under the Prevention of Illegal Eviction from and Unlawful Occupation of Land Act (PIE Act). Knowing the process gives you time to seek help.
Step 1. Do not ignore the notice. Read it carefully — is it a notice to remedy a breach, a notice to vacate, or an official court summons (Notice of Motion)?
Step 2. If it is only a landlord's letter, you have not yet been evicted — a court order is still required.
Step 3. Contact Legal Aid KwaZulu-Natal or a tenant rights organisation immediately for free advice.
Step 4. If served with a court application, respond within the time stated in the notice — usually 5 to 15 business days. File an opposing affidavit through the court.
Step 5. At the court hearing, raise all relevant circumstances — children, elderly people, illness, lack of alternative accommodation. Judges must consider these under the PIE Act.
Step 6. If the court grants an eviction order, it will specify the date by which you must vacate. You can apply for a stay of execution if your circumstances warrant it.
📋 CCMA: Durban CCMA (031 310 0300)
⚖️ Legal Aid SA: Legal Aid South Africa — Durban (031 330 2100)
🏛️ High Court: KwaZulu-Natal Division of the High Court — Durban (031 372 3000) and Pietermaritzburg (033 345 8211)
🏢 Magistrates' Courts: Durban, Pietermaritzburg, Newcastle, Richards Bay, and other magistrates' courts
🏠 Rental Housing Tribunal: KZN Rental Housing Tribunal (033 395 2090)
KwaZulu-Natal has a high prevalence of customary marriage disputes, ESTA evictions in rural areas, and industrial labour disputes in the port and manufacturing sectors.