BAD day to be a South African in debt – Flapraze.buzz

BAD day to be a South African in debt

South Africans are bracing for higher borrowing costs, with the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) widely expected to increase interest rates by 25 basis points when its Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) concludes its meeting on Thursday, 28 May.

If implemented, the repo rate would rise to 7%, while the prime lending rate would likely increase to 10.5% – placing additional pressure on households already struggling with rising living costs.

The expected move follows a sharp increase in inflation, driven largely by the ongoing conflict in the Middle East and its knock-on effect on global oil prices.

Inflation jumps above target

Headline consumer inflation accelerated to 4% in April, climbing sharply from 3.1% in March and moving further above the Reserve Bank’s preferred 3% target.

Economists say the increase marked the first major inflationary impact stemming from renewed geopolitical instability in the Middle East, particularly around disruptions to global energy supply routes.

The war in the region has triggered higher international oil prices, fuelling concerns about sustained inflation pressure across emerging markets.

Fuel prices hit South Africa

South Africa, which imports most of its fuel, has not escaped the fallout.

Motorists have already felt the effects through steep fuel price increases in recent months, while higher transport costs are expected to filter through to food and consumer prices.

Government introduced temporary fuel levy relief measures to soften the blow, but portions of that support are expected to be phased out, adding to inflation concerns.

With inflation risks mounting, analysts believe the MPC may have little room to maintain a dovish stance.

What a rate hike would mean

A 25 basis point increase would translate into higher monthly repayments for consumers with home loans, vehicle finance, credit cards and other forms of debt.

Banks typically pass repo rate increases directly onto customers through higher lending rates.

For consumers already grappling with elevated food prices, expensive fuel and broader economic strain, another interest rate hike could deepen affordability pressures.

All eyes will now be on Thursday’s MPC announcement to see whether the Reserve Bank opts for a hike – or signals that more increases could still lie ahead.

Dates for SARB MPC meeting dates in 2026

Month Date Outcome
January 29 January No change
March 26 March No change
May 28 May TBA
July 23 July TBA
September 23 September TBA
November 19 November TBA

Monthly bond repayment table

The table below shows the current monthly bond repayments on various bond values over a 20-year period assuming no deposit and repayments at prime, as well as what a 25 basis point hike would mean:

Bond Current 25 basis point hike Change
R750 000 R7 362 R7 488 R126
R800 000 R7 853 R7 987 R134
R850 000 R8 344 R8 486 R142
R900 000 R8 835 R8 985 R150
R950 000 R9 326 R9 485 R159
R1 000 000 R9 816 R9 984 R168
R1 500 000 R14 725 R14 976 R251
R2 000 000 R19 633 R19 968 R335
R2 500 000 R24 541 R24 960 R419
R3 000 000 R29 449 R29 951 R502
R3 500 000 R34 358 R34 943 R585
R4 000 000 R39 266 R39 935 R669
R4 500 000 R44 174 R44 927 R753
R5 000 000 R49 082 R49 919 R837

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