By Matthew Freer
Introduction
On 27 January 2026, the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, Mr Mpho Parks Tau, published a series of draft notices in the Government Gazette proposing significant updates to South Africa’s merger control regime. These include draft amendments to the merger thresholds under section 11 of the Competition Act, 89 of 1998 (the “Act”), as well as a separate draft amendment to the merger filing fees payable to the Competition Commission.
Together, the proposed changes reflect the first inflationary adjustment to South Africa’s merger notification framework in several years and are intended to align regulatory thresholds and fees with prevailing economic conditions.
Draft amendment to merger thresholds
In Government Notice No. 7029, published in Government Gazette No. 54020, the Minister, acting in consultation with the Competition Commission, invited public comment on proposed amendments to the Determination of Merger Thresholds set out in Part A of General Notice 1003 of 2017 (published in Government Notice No. 41124 of 15 September 2017).
The notice is issued in terms of section 11 of the Act and confirms the Minister’s intention to:
- amend the existing merger thresholds; and
- make a new determination of merger thresholds as set out in the Schedule to the notice.
Method of calculation remains unchanged
Importantly, the Minister has expressly confirmed that the Method of Calculation remains unchanged. The method set out in Part B of General Notice 1254 of 2017 (published under Government Notice No. 41245 of 10 November 2017) will continue to apply. Turnover and asset values must therefore still be calculated in accordance with International Financial Reporting Standards (“IFRS”), applying the same methods and principles currently used by the Competition Commission.
The Schedule further retains the existing definitional framework, including the definition of a “transferred firm” aligned with section 12 of the Act.
Revised lower (intermediate) merger thresholds
A merger will meet the lower threshold if both of the following requirements are satisfied:
- The combined annual turnover in, into or from South Africa, or the combined asset value in South Africa, of the acquiring and transferred firms is R1 billion or more (up from R600 million); and
- The annual turnover or asset value in South Africa of the transferred firm is R175 million or more (up from R100 million).
Revised higher (large) merger thresholds
A merger will meet the higher threshold if both of the following requirements are satisfied:
- The combined annual turnover in, into or from South Africa, or the combined asset value in South Africa, of the acquiring and transferred firms is R9.5 billion or more (up from R6.6 billion); and
- The annual turnover or asset value in South Africa of the transferred firm is R280 million or more (up from R190 million).
Merger classification unchanged
The proposed amendments do not alter the categorisation of mergers under the Act:
- Small mergers fall below either value of the lower threshold;
- Intermediate mergers meet the lower threshold but fall below the higher threshold; and
- Large mergers meet or exceed the higher threshold.
Draft amendment to merger filing fees
Published simultaneously, Government Notice No. 7030 in Government Gazette No. 54021 proposes amendments to Rule 10(5) of the Rules for the Conduct of Proceedings in the Competition Commission and inflationary adjustment to the merger filing fees gazetted in General Notice 1336 of 2018 (published in Government Notice No. 42082 of 4 December 2018), dealing specifically with merger filing fees.
This notice is issued in terms of section 21(4) of the Act, in consultation with the Commissioner, and invites public comment on a draft amendment aimed at effecting an inflationary adjustment to merger filing fees. The fees were last updated in 2018 and have remained unchanged since.
Proposed revised merger filing fees
Under the draft amendment to Rule 10(5), the filing fees for merger notifications will increase as follows:
- Intermediate mergers: from R165,000 to R220,000;
- Large mergers: from R550,000 to R735,000.
No changes are proposed to the structure or timing of fee payments, only the quantum payable upon filing.
Public participation and next steps
Stakeholders and interested parties are invited to submit written comments on both draft notices within 30 business days of publication. Submissions must be addressed to the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition, for the attention of Dr Ivan Galodikwe, either by email or by hand delivery to the Department’s offices in Sunnyside, Pretoria.
If finalised, the combined effect of the proposed amendments will be to:
- reduce the number of transactions requiring mandatory notification; while
- increasing the cost of filing notifiable intermediate and large mergers.
Together, these measures signal a recalibration of South Africa’s merger control regime to reflect inflation and economic growth, without altering the underlying legal framework or analytical methodology applied by the competition authorities.
Conclusion
John Oxenham, director at Primerio, notes that “the step taken by the DTIC to increase the financial thresholds for purposes of merger regulation in South Africa demonstrates a move towards greater ease in deal negotiation and has been welcomed by the economy. Parties must still, however, note that while the thresholds may indicate fewer notifications being required be submitted with the South African competition authorities, the Commission may require mandatory notification of small mergers (i.e., mergers which do not meet the intermediate thresholds).”