Systemic crisis: 48% of Gauteng schools now operating above capacity

Zuko Komisa

  • Enrolment surged from 1.4 million in 1995 to 2.8 million in 2026, driven by 2% annual growth.
  • 48% of schools are overcrowded, leaving a shortfall of 88,000 secondary school places.
  • A R3.98bn budget covers only 23 new schools, despite a requirement for 200 to stabilise the system.

Gauteng Education MEC Lebogang Maile has warned that the province is facing “severe” systemic overcrowding. Pupil numbers have doubled over the last 30 years, reaching 2.8 million in 2026.

This surge, fueled by migration and urbanisation, adds roughly 50,000 new learners annually—the highest growth rate in South Africa.

Currently, 48% of Gauteng’s 2,111 schools operate above capacity. The crisis is most acute in secondary education, where 64% of schools are over-subscribed.

While some schools remain under-capacity, the number of these facilities is rapidly declining as the province reaches a saturation point.

Infrastructure delivery is failing to meet this demand. Although the province requires 200 new schools for stability, current funding only allows for approximately seven new builds per year. Construction is further hampered by vandalism, budget cuts, and land challenges.

To bridge the gap, the government is accelerating delivery through private partnerships, “self-build” classroom programmes, and the reopening of decommissioned missionary schools.

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