Education Funding South Africa
Education funding in South Africa can come from NSFAS, teaching bursaries, private bursaries, government bursaries, student loans, learnerships, internships and student accommodation support.
This guide helps you choose the right funding route before you waste time applying in the wrong place.
Education Funding Quick Answer
If you want to study at a public university or TVET college and your household income is within the NSFAS limit, start with NSFAS. If you want to become a teacher, check Funza Lushaka. If your course, marks, employer target or province has a special funding opportunity, check student bursaries.
If you do not qualify for a bursary or NSFAS, compare student loans carefully and avoid signing anything you do not understand.
Education Funding Route Finder
Use this quick tool to choose the most likely funding route. It does not approve funding. It simply points you to the route that usually makes the most sense.
Main Education Funding Routes
Do not treat every funding option as the same thing. NSFAS, Funza Lushaka, bursaries, loans, learnerships and internships solve different problems.
NSFAS
For qualifying students at public universities and TVET colleges. It can cover study costs and allowances if approved.
NSFAS guideFunza Lushaka Bursary
For qualifying students who want to become teachers in priority teaching areas.
Funza Lushaka guideStudent Bursaries
Funding from companies, trusts, municipalities, provinces, universities and public bodies.
Student bursariesStudent Accommodation
Accommodation support for students who need a place to stay near campus or approved study sites.
Student accommodationStudent Loans
Borrowed funding that must normally be repaid. Use only after checking grants and bursaries first.
Student loansLearnerships
Work-based learning routes that may include training, workplace experience and a stipend.
LearnershipsInternships
Work experience opportunities for students, graduates or young people entering the job market.
InternshipsNSFAS Funding
NSFAS is usually the first route to check if you want to study at a public university or TVET college and you need help with study costs.
NSFAS funding is aimed at South African citizens and permanent residents who meet the financial rules. The official NSFAS guidance lists the household income limit as not more than R350,000 per year, or R600,000 per year for persons living with disabilities.
Official NSFAS route: NSFAS website and myNSFAS portal.
Funza Lushaka Bursary
Funza Lushaka is a teaching bursary route. It is not a general bursary for every course. It is mainly for people who want to study teaching and meet the programme rules.
DBE describes Funza Lushaka as covering essentials such as tuition fees, accommodation or transport, meals, learning materials, personal care allowance and teaching practice support.
Official Funza route: Funza Lushaka website and Department of Basic Education Funza page.
Student Bursaries
Student bursaries can come from companies, universities, municipalities, government departments, trusts, foundations and professional bodies. They are often linked to a course, career field, location, academic performance or financial need.
This is where many students lose time. A bursary for engineering may not help a teaching student. A provincial bursary may only support residents of that province. A company bursary may expect you to study a specific scarce-skill field.
| Bursary Type | Best For | What to Check First |
|---|---|---|
| Company bursaries | Students in fields needed by that company. | Course field, marks, work-back rules and closing date. |
| Government bursaries | Students in priority public-sector fields. | Province, department, field and documents. |
| University bursaries | Accepted or registered students at that institution. | Student number, financial aid office and academic record. |
| Trust or foundation bursaries | Students matching the trust’s mission or target group. | Eligibility, motivation letter, results and proof of need. |
Student Accommodation Support
Accommodation is often separate from tuition funding. A student may have tuition support but still struggle with residence, private accommodation, transport or food costs.
NSFAS has an accommodation process for beneficiaries, but accommodation must still follow the official rules and approval routes. Students should not pay deposits to suspicious landlords or “residence agents” before confirming legitimacy.
Student Loans
Student loans can help when grants and bursaries are not available, but they are not free money. A loan creates a repayment obligation, and the cost can include interest, fees and repayment conditions.
Use loans carefully. Compare the total repayment cost, who must sign, when repayment starts, whether a surety is required and what happens if studies are delayed.
Learnerships and Internships
Learnerships and internships are not exactly the same as bursaries. They are usually linked to work experience, skills development or workplace training.
This route can make sense if you need practical experience, a stipend, workplace exposure or a pathway into a sector after school, college or university.
| Route | Best For | Main Difference |
|---|---|---|
| Learnership | People who want structured workplace learning. | Usually combines training and workplace experience. |
| Internship | Students or graduates who need work experience. | Usually focused on workplace exposure after or during studies. |
Documents Usually Needed for Education Funding
Different funders ask for different documents, but most education funding applications need the same basic evidence. Prepare these before the closing date.
- South African ID or accepted identity document.
- Latest school results, matric results or academic record.
- Proof of application, acceptance or registration where available.
- Proof of household income or affidavits where required.
- Proof of residence, if the funder uses location rules.
- Motivation letter, CV or references where required.
- Banking details, but only through trusted official application routes.
Which Funding Route Should You Try First?
The best route depends on what you are trying to fund. Use this simple order before applying everywhere randomly.
| Your Situation | Start Here | Then Check |
|---|---|---|
| Public university or TVET study | NSFAS | University financial aid and bursaries. |
| Teaching qualification | Funza Lushaka | Education bursaries and university funding. |
| Specific career field | Field-specific bursaries | Company and government bursaries. |
| Need accommodation | Institution/NSFAS accommodation route | Approved residences and campus housing. |
| Need work experience | Learnerships or internships | SETA, employer and graduate programmes. |
| No grant or bursary available | Loan comparison | Repayment cost and surety rules. |
Official Education Funding Links
Use official routes first for national funding applications. Use university, TVET, municipality and company pages for funder-specific bursaries.
Education Funding FAQs
What is the best education funding option in South Africa?
For public university and TVET study, NSFAS is usually the first route to check. For teaching, Funza Lushaka may be relevant. For specific fields, also check student bursaries.
Is NSFAS the same as a bursary?
NSFAS is a national student financial aid scheme for qualifying public university and TVET students. Bursaries can come from many different funders and may have their own course, marks, location or work-back rules.
Does Funza Lushaka fund every course?
No. Funza Lushaka is for qualifying teaching studies and has its own rules, priorities and application process.
Should I use a student loan before applying for bursaries?
No. Check NSFAS, bursaries and university financial aid first. A student loan must usually be repaid, so it should be considered carefully.
Can SRDTool.com approve NSFAS or bursary funding?
No. SRDTool.com is independent and cannot approve, decline, process, pay or speed up NSFAS, Funza Lushaka, bursaries, loans, learnerships or internships.
Independent Disclaimer
SRDTool.com is independent and is not affiliated with NSFAS, Funza Lushaka, the Department of Basic Education, any university, TVET college, bank, bursary provider or South African government department. Official funding applications, approvals, payments, accommodation decisions and appeals are controlled by the relevant official funders and institutions.
