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Home Money

Winter Is When Bad Money Habits Show Up — And South Africans Are Feeling It

in Lifestyle, Money
Reading Time: 4 min
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As temperatures drop across South Africa, the real chill isn’t just in the air—it’s in household budgets.

Winter has a way of exposing financial pressure points that are easy to ignore during warmer months. What feels manageable in summer can quickly become overwhelming when electricity bills climb, fuel costs rise, grocery spending increases, and home maintenance issues demand urgent attention.

These aren’t surprises. They’re seasonal patterns.

And yet, for many households, they still arrive like emergencies.

The hidden cost of winter living

Winter isn’t defined by one large expense—it’s a slow build-up of smaller, compounding costs.

Higher electricity usage from heaters and geysers.
Increased fuel spend during colder, shorter days.
Rising grocery bills as families cook more meals at home.
Delayed maintenance issues that can no longer be postponed.

Individually, each cost may seem manageable. Together, they quietly stretch monthly budgets beyond their limits.

The real issue isn’t the cost itself. It’s the lack of preparation.

When predictable costs become financial stress

According to Gavyn Letley, Product Head at DirectAxis, most people don’t turn to credit out of choice.

“Our research shows that the main reason people apply for unsecured loans is to cover emergency expenses,” he explains. “It’s usually because something predictable wasn’t planned for, and now it feels urgent.”

That urgency often leads to reactive decisions—borrowing without comparison, without full understanding of costs, and under pressure.

And that’s where things get expensive.

The real reason people borrow in winter

It’s rarely about major financial shocks. More often, it’s timing.

A heater stops working during a cold snap.
A geyser trips unexpectedly.
A car battery fails on a freezing morning.

None of these are unusual. But without a financial buffer, even relatively small costs can force bigger financial decisions.

“If you don’t have a buffer, even a small expense can escalate quickly,” Letley notes. “That’s when credit becomes reactive rather than strategic.”

Borrowing itself isn’t the problem. Borrowing under pressure is.

Fix the leaks before they drain your budget

Before cutting back, the smarter move is to identify what’s quietly increasing your costs.

Small, targeted interventions can deliver real savings across the season:

  • Sealing gaps and improving insulation to reduce heating demand
  • Checking your geyser and installing a geyser blanket to limit heat loss
  • Servicing heaters to improve efficiency
  • Using curtains strategically to retain warmth at night

These aren’t just maintenance tasks—they’re cost-control strategies. A modest upfront spend can significantly reduce monthly expenses throughout winter.

Using credit with intention, not urgency

There are moments when borrowing makes sense—especially if it prevents a larger cost down the line. But the difference lies in how that decision is made.

Before taking on credit, ask:

  • Is this solving the problem, or just delaying it?
  • Do I fully understand the total cost of this loan?
  • Can I repay it comfortably without needing more credit?

“Credit should be a deliberate tool,” says Letley. “Not something you fall into because you didn’t have time to plan.”

That mindset shift—from reactive to intentional—is what protects long-term financial health.

Three simple moves that can change your winter

If there’s one takeaway this season, it’s this: preparation beats reaction.

Start here:

  • Plan your winter spending upfront — even a rough estimate reduces surprises
  • Prioritise efficiency over convenience — small fixes now lower bills for months
  • Build a buffer — it doesn’t need to be perfect, just enough to reduce pressure

The bigger truth about winter and money

Winter doesn’t create financial pressure—it reveals it.

The households that navigate the season comfortably aren’t necessarily earning more. They’re planning better, fixing the right things early, and using credit carefully when needed.

That’s the real shift.

From reacting… to preparing.

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