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South Africa’s Two-Pot Retirement System: Why Employers Now Hold the Key to Financial Futures

in Lifestyle, Money
Reading Time: 5 min
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04 May 2026 — When South Africa introduced its two-pot retirement system in 2024, the national conversation focused on mechanics: how it works, who qualifies, and when funds can be accessed. But two years on, a more urgent and revealing question has emerged — not how the system works, but how South Africans are using it.

And the answer carries serious implications for the country’s long-term financial health.

At the centre of this evolving reality is a powerful, often underestimated force: the employer.


A System Designed for Balance — But Testing Behaviour

The two-pot system fundamentally reshaped retirement savings by dividing contributions into three distinct components:

  • A retirement pot, preserved until retirement
  • A savings pot, allowing one withdrawal per tax year
  • A vested pot, holding pre-existing savings under previous rules

The intention was clear: provide flexibility during financial stress while protecting long-term retirement outcomes.

And initially, it worked — at least on the surface.

But within the first year alone, withdrawals from savings pots surged to approximately R57 billion, revealing not just demand, but behaviour.

More tellingly, patterns are beginning to form. Around 62% of claimants are now on their third withdrawal, suggesting that what was meant to be occasional relief is, for many, becoming routine.

For some households, the savings pot is no longer a safety net — it is a recurring solution to short-term financial pressure, often used to settle high-cost or informal debt such as payday loans.


The Hidden Cost: What Employees Don’t Always See

On paper, accessing retirement savings may feel like relief.

In reality, it can quietly erode future financial security.

Thabang Thaoge, Executive Head for Employee Benefits at First National Bank, warns that the real cost is often invisible:

“Access to retirement savings can be a lifeline during times of financial distress. But if withdrawals become routine rather than exceptional, the long-term impact on retirement outcomes can be significant.”

The challenge is not a lack of awareness — many employees know withdrawals are not ideal.

The issue is understanding just how much it costs over time.


The Power of Compounding — and the Price of Interrupting It

Consider a practical example:

An employee aged 45 with R500,000 saved, contributing R5,000 per month until retirement at 65, assuming an average annual return of 8%.

  • No withdrawals: Retirement value could reach ~R5.08 million
  • One withdrawal of R200,000 at age 50: Drops to ~R4.72 million (loss of ~R360,000)
  • Annual withdrawals of R30,000: Falls dramatically to ~R2.76 million

This isn’t just about the money taken out.

It’s about what that money would have become.

Thabang Thaoge explains:

“Employees tend to focus on the immediate cash benefit. What is less visible is the long-term compounding effect of that decision. Over 20 or 30 years, the impact can be substantial.”

Add to this the reality that withdrawals are taxed at an individual’s marginal tax rate, and the actual cash received is often significantly less than expected.


Employers: The Missing Link in Financial Behaviour

While policy created the structure, behaviour will determine the outcome.

And this is where employers step in.

Organisations offering retirement funds are uniquely positioned — not just as benefit providers, but as trusted guides in their employees’ financial journeys.

According to Thabang Thaoge:

“Employers already invest significantly in retirement benefits for their staff. Helping employees understand how to protect those savings is a natural extension of that investment.”

This isn’t about restricting access or discouraging withdrawals altogether.

The two-pot system was intentionally designed to provide relief during genuine financial emergencies.

The real goal is informed decision-making.


From Access to Understanding: A New Workplace Responsibility

The shift required now is subtle but powerful.

From:

  • Providing access to retirement funds

To:

  • Providing context, education, and foresight

By partnering with financial institutions and retirement providers, employers can embed meaningful financial education into the workplace — helping employees understand:

  • The long-term cost of early withdrawals
  • The impact of compounding over time
  • The trade-offs between immediate relief and future stability

Because without that understanding, flexibility becomes risk.


A System That Depends on Behaviour

South Africa’s two-pot retirement system is not flawed.

It is simply human.

It acknowledges that financial pressure is real — but it also relies on disciplined decision-making to succeed.

And in that equation, employers are no longer bystanders.

They are enablers of better outcomes.

Because in the end, retirement savings were never meant to be a convenient source of cash.

They were meant to be something far more important:

A future.

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