28/02/2026
Are you aware of the intended legislative changes contemplated for marriages in South Africa?
The Marriage Bill, 2023 is a proposed unified marriage law that seeks to replace South Africa’s current patchwork of marriage statutes — namely:
* the Marriage Act, 1961,
* the Recognition of Customary Marriages Act, 1998, and
* the Civil Unions Act, 2006 —�with one comprehensive statute to govern marriage, property, rights, and dissolution for all couples.
The bill was introduced to Parliament on 13 December 2023 and, as of early 2026, remains pending review and public consultation.
The Key Objectives of the Bill are to:
1. Unify All Marriage Laws
* Instead of having separate laws for civil, customary, and civil union marriages, the Marriage Bill would create one inclusive legal framework.
2. Recognise Diverse Marriage Forms
The Bill aims to recognise legally:
* civil marriages,
* customary marriages,
* religious marriages (including Muslim, Hindu, and others),�in a single structure with equal legal validity and protections.
3. Minimum Age of Marriage
* Proposes setting the legal minimum age for marriage at 18 years and criminalising child marriage practices.
4. Designation of Marriage Officers
* Allows religious leaders, traditional leaders, and other officials to be designated as legal marriage officers once trained and authorised.
5. Combatting Fraudulent Marriages
* Introduces requirements to reduce sham or fraudulent marriages (e.g., requiring both spouses’ presence during registration).
6. Property and Dissolution Clarity
* Clarifies proprietary consequences of marriage and how marriages end (although details may be supplemented by associated family law reform bills).
The Major Themes Driving the Bill:
Equality & Inclusion
* Designed to ensure equal legal protection regardless of race, religion, sexual orientation, or cultural tradition.
Modernisation
* Simplifies and modernises marriage law, removing outdated or fragmented regimes.
Public Participation and Debate
* Parliament has conducted public hearings across provinces, with citizens debating issues ranging from the age of consent to polygamy and same-sex marriage clauses.
Contentious Issues Raised
Legal Age of Consent
Some groups have called for raising the legal marriage age to 21 (beyond the proposed 18).
Cultural and Religious Reactions
There have been mixed reactions — some conservative organisations oppose recognition of certain forms of marriage, citing religious beliefs and moral concerns.
Recognition of Religious Marriages
Although Muslim marriages have already begun to be recognised administratively, integrating broad religious marriage forms into a single law remains a focus of the Bill.
Current Status (as of 2026)
* The Bill has completed various public hearings and is still under parliamentary review.
* It has not yet been signed into law, but it is progressing and remains a priority legislative reform.
In Short
What the Marriage Bill would do:�Replace multiple marriage laws with one unified statute�Recognise all marriage forms (civil, customary, religious) equally�Fix age-related safeguards and standardise marriage officer designation�Reduce fraud and modernise marriage law
Legal age for marriage�Recognition of diverse cultural/religious practices�Property and dissolution rules
Critics say the Bill fails to address or recognise cohabitation and other modern relationship forms, leaving many couples without legal protection for property and family rights.