We work hard to keep this guide accurate. If you spot outdated info, email updates to contact@desinri.com.

Short Description: Complete guide to South Africa’s Intra-Company Transfer Work Visa (ICT): eligibility, documents, process, family rules, restrictions, renewal limits, and official sources.

Last Verified On: 2026-04-07

Visa Snapshot

Item Details
Country South Africa
Visa name Intra-Company Transfer Work Visa
Visa short name ICT
Category Temporary residence work visa
Main purpose To transfer an employee from a foreign company to a related branch, subsidiary, or affiliate in South Africa
Typical applicant Existing employee of a multinational group being assigned to a South African entity
Validity Up to 4 years under current rules
Stay duration Usually aligned to the approved ICT period, up to 4 years
Entries allowed Usually multiple for the validity period, but visa label/issuance conditions should be checked
Extension possible? Very limited; current law/rules generally provide that an ICT visa may not be renewed or extended beyond the maximum period
Work allowed? Yes, but only for the approved South African host entity and in the approved ICT role
Study allowed? Limited; incidental study may be possible, but this is not a study visa
Family allowed? Yes, qualifying spouse/partner and children may apply separately for appropriate accompanying visas
PR path? Possible but limited/indirect; the ICT route itself is generally not designed as a direct permanent residence path
Citizenship path? Indirect; only if the person later qualifies for long-term residence/permanent residence and then naturalization under South African law

The South African Intra-Company Transfer Work Visa is a temporary residence work visa for employees who already work for a company outside South Africa and are being transferred to a related entity in South Africa.

It exists to let multinational businesses move staff internally where the foreign employer and South African host are part of the same corporate group or otherwise qualifying related entities.

In South Africa’s immigration system, this is a work visa under the Immigration Act and Immigration Regulations, not a tourist visa, not a business visitor visa, and not a permanent residence permit.

In practice, it is typically issued as a temporary residence visa placed in the passport, supported by an approved application submitted through the Department of Home Affairs process, often via the overseas mission or outsourced visa facilitation channel depending on where the person applies.

Official naming

The official name used in South African immigration materials is generally:

  • Intra-company transfer work visa

It is commonly shortened to:

  • ICT visa
  • ICT work visa
  • Intra-company transfer visa

How it fits into the system

South Africa has multiple work visa categories, including:

  • General work visa
  • Critical skills work visa
  • Corporate visa
  • Intra-company transfer work visa

The ICT visa is narrower than the others. It is for an internal transfer, not for open-market recruitment.

What it is not

It is not:

  • a visitor visa
  • a business visa for company owners
  • a corporate visa for bulk employer hiring
  • a remote work visa
  • a permanent residence permit

2. Who should apply for this visa?

Best-suited applicants

This visa is best for:

  • Employees of multinational companies being transferred to a South African branch, subsidiary, or affiliate
  • Senior staff, specialists, managers, technical experts, and trainees whose employer is moving them temporarily to South Africa
  • Professionals whose role is tied to internal group operations in South Africa

Who should generally not use this visa

Tourists

Do not use an ICT visa for tourism. Use:

  • a visitor visa, if your nationality requires one
  • or visa-free entry if eligible

Business visitors

If you are coming only for:

  • meetings
  • conferences
  • short internal consultations
  • exploratory visits

you may need a visitor visa for business purposes instead, not an ICT work visa.

Job seekers

If you do not already work for the overseas company and are simply seeking a job in South Africa, the ICT visa is not the right route. Consider, if eligible:

  • general work visa
  • critical skills work visa

Students

If your main purpose is study, use a study visa.

Spouses/partners and children

Dependents do not receive ICT status automatically. They usually need separate accompanying visas or other suitable visas.

Digital nomads

This is not the right route for independent remote workers. South Africa has had policy discussion around remote work/digital nomad options, but applicants must verify the current official route because this is distinct from ICT.

Founders/entrepreneurs/investors

If you want to set up or run your own business in South Africa, you should examine the business visa route, not ICT.

Retirees

Use the retired person visa route if applicable.

Religious workers

Usually another work or religious route is required, depending on the role.

Artists/athletes

Paid performances or sports work typically require a different work/visitor authorization structure.

Transit passengers

Use a transit visa if required.

Medical travelers

Use a visitor visa for medical treatment, if applicable.

Diplomatic or official travelers

Separate official/diplomatic arrangements apply.

Quick suitability guide

Applicant type ICT suitable? Better route if not
Existing employee transferred within same group Yes
Tourist No Visitor/visa-free entry
External hire by SA employer No General work visa / Critical skills work visa
Student No Study visa
Founder opening own company Usually no Business visa
Spouse joining ICT holder Not directly Relative/accompanying visa route
Freelancer/independent remote worker No Verify current remote work options officially

3. What is this visa used for?

Permitted uses

The ICT visa is used for:

  • temporary transfer of an employee from a foreign company to a related entity in South Africa
  • lawful employment in South Africa for the approved host entity
  • carrying out the transferred employee’s assigned internal corporate duties
  • living in South Africa for the approved transfer period

Usually allowed as incidental activity

These are not the main purpose, but may occur alongside lawful ICT stay:

  • normal day-to-day living
  • family life if dependents obtain proper accompanying visas
  • short internal training connected to the transfer role
  • limited business travel in and out of South Africa during visa validity, if the visa permits multiple entries

Prohibited or not covered

This visa is not for:

  • general tourism as the primary reason for entry
  • taking employment with a different employer
  • self-employment
  • freelancing for local clients
  • setting up your own business under ICT status
  • studying as the main purpose of stay
  • volunteering outside permitted immigration rules
  • journalism unless separately authorized where required
  • long-term residence beyond the visa’s legal limit
  • switching employers freely in South Africa
  • undocumented remote work arrangements outside the approved employment basis

Grey areas and common misunderstandings

Remote work

If you are in South Africa on an ICT visa, your legal basis for stay is tied to the approved intra-company transfer employment. Using the visa as a broad “work-from-anywhere” status is a misunderstanding.

Meetings vs work

Short business meetings do not usually require an ICT visa if no local employment is taking place. But once the person is being assigned to perform employment duties in South Africa, ICT may be required.

Training

Intra-company training can support an ICT application, but it should still be a genuine internal company transfer within the legal framework.

4. Official visa classification and naming

Official program name

  • Intra-company transfer work visa

Legal framework

The route sits under:

  • the Immigration Act, 2002
  • the Immigration Regulations, 2014 as amended
  • Department of Home Affairs operational requirements

Related categories often confused with ICT

Category What it is Key difference from ICT
General Work Visa For employment in South Africa where the employer recruits the foreign national Not limited to internal group transfer
Critical Skills Work Visa For applicants with qualifying critical skills Skills-based, not internal-transfer based
Corporate Visa Issued to an employer to employ a number of foreign workers Employer-level authorization, not individual transfer visa
Business Visa For people investing in/establishing a business Entrepreneur route, not employee transfer
Visitor Visa for Business Short business visit No ongoing local employment assignment

Old vs current naming

South Africa historically used “permits” more commonly in public discussion, but under the current system the applicant generally applies for a visa in the temporary residence framework. Many people still casually say “ICT permit.”

5. Eligibility criteria

Core eligibility

To qualify, the applicant generally must show:

  • they are employed by a company abroad
  • that company is related to the South African host entity
  • they are being transferred to work for the South African branch/subsidiary/affiliate
  • the transfer is temporary
  • the South African host confirms the assignment
  • the applicant meets South Africa’s general visa requirements

Official ICT-specific requirements commonly required

Under South African rules, the application generally requires evidence such as:

  • confirmation that the foreigner is employed by the business abroad
  • confirmation of transfer to a branch, subsidiary, or affiliate in South Africa
  • an employment contract with the South African branch/subsidiary/affiliate
  • a letter from the employer confirming the transfer and period
  • an undertaking that the applicant will leave South Africa at the end of the assignment
  • an undertaking that the employee will be employed in a specific position
  • proof of skills transfer plan may be required under current practice/regulation depending on the exact implementation and checklist used
  • an undertaking regarding repatriation costs may also be required

Because document checklists can vary by mission or VFS channel, applicants must verify the latest official local checklist.

Nationality rules

There is no publicly stated nationality cap specific to the ICT category in the law itself. However:

  • all applicants are subject to nationality-specific visa application logistics
  • some applicants may apply at a mission in their country of nationality or ordinary residence
  • some nationalities may face longer security checks
  • visa-exempt entry for tourism does not remove the need for a work visa if the purpose is ICT employment

Passport validity

Applicants usually need:

  • a valid passport
  • sufficient blank visa pages
  • validity extending beyond intended stay, subject to current mission requirements

Some missions apply minimum passport-validity rules; confirm locally.

Age

There is no general public rule making ICT visas age-restricted in the way youth schemes are. However:

  • minors are not typical ICT applicants
  • working-age and labor law realities apply

Education, skills, and experience

There is no universal published degree threshold specific to ICT in the same way as certain points-based systems elsewhere. But the applicant must credibly match the transferred role.

Some missions may ask for:

  • CV/resume
  • qualifications
  • professional registrations if relevant to regulated occupations

Language

No general English language test requirement is publicly set out for this visa category.

Sponsorship/employer support

A sponsoring corporate relationship is central. The applicant typically needs:

  • overseas employer support
  • South African host entity support
  • transfer confirmation
  • contractual documentation

Invitation/job offer

This is not a normal open-market “job offer” route. Instead, there must be:

  • an internal transfer arrangement
  • host entity contract/assignment documentation

Points requirement

Not applicable for this visa. South Africa does not operate this route on a points test.

Relationship proof

Only relevant for dependents, not the principal ICT applicant.

Maintenance funds

South African temporary residence applications often involve proof that the applicant can support themselves, but for ICT the employment package and employer support may satisfy much of the practical concern. Exact financial proof expectations can vary by mission/checklist.

Accommodation proof

May be requested in practice, especially at mission level, though not always a core statutory ICT-specific item. Check local checklist.

Onward travel

Applicants may be asked to show return/onward arrangements or at least the intention and ability to depart after the assignment.

Health

Applicants may need:

  • medical report
  • radiological report, if applicable and not exempt due to pregnancy/age or current rule exceptions

Character/criminal record

Applicants usually need:

  • police clearance certificate(s) from relevant countries, depending on period of residence and checklist instructions

Insurance

South African law does not always frame this the same way some countries do, but applicants should check whether local mission instructions require travel or medical coverage evidence.

Biometrics

Depending on where you apply, biometrics and in-person submission may be required through the official application channel.

Intent requirements

The route is temporary. The applicant must show genuine intention to:

  • perform the transfer assignment lawfully
  • leave South Africa when the visa expires unless another lawful status is obtained where legally possible

Residency outside South Africa

Many applicants apply from outside South Africa. In-country status change/switching is restricted in many cases under South African immigration practice and law.

Quotas/caps/ballots

Not applicable for this visa based on publicly available rules.

Embassy-specific rules

Very important:

  • application mechanics
  • document formatting
  • appointment systems
  • notarization expectations
  • police certificate rules
  • translation requirements

can vary by South African mission or the outsourced submission center used in that country.

6. Who is NOT eligible / common refusal triggers

Not eligible or high-risk cases

You may be ineligible or face refusal if:

  • you do not actually work for the overseas entity
  • the South African host is not a genuine related branch/subsidiary/affiliate
  • the role is really local recruitment, not a transfer
  • your documents do not prove the corporate relationship
  • the proposed work does not match ICT rules
  • you plan to work for another employer
  • you have serious criminal, security, or immigration violations
  • your passport is invalid or insufficient
  • you submit false, altered, or unverifiable records

Common refusal triggers

  • incomplete application
  • missing employer letters
  • weak proof of corporate linkage
  • inconsistent dates between contract, transfer letter, and application form
  • wrong visa category selected
  • missing police or medical documents
  • unclear repatriation undertaking
  • weak explanation of why transfer is needed
  • poor quality scans or missing signatures
  • applying in the wrong country or wrong jurisdiction
  • prior overstay or status violation in South Africa
  • failure to respond to document requests

Warning

A very common problem is treating the ICT route as if it were just a standard job offer visa. It is not. The internal transfer relationship must be clear and documented.

7. Benefits of this visa

Main benefits

  • lawful right to work in South Africa for the approved host entity
  • suitable for multinational staffing needs
  • avoids using a general work route where the case is truly an internal transfer
  • allows temporary residence during the assignment period
  • may allow family to accompany through separate appropriate visas
  • often easier to explain than open-market recruitment if the transfer documentation is strong

Practical benefits

  • designed specifically for internal corporate mobility
  • can support specialist deployments, management rotations, and skills transfer
  • may align well with fixed-term assignments

Long-term benefit limits

This route is useful operationally, but it is not usually the strongest long-term settlement path.

8. Limitations and restrictions

Major restrictions

  • tied to the approved transfer and host entity
  • not a free labor-market work authorization
  • generally capped at a maximum period of up to 4 years
  • generally not renewable/extendable beyond that maximum
  • not intended as a direct permanent residence route
  • changing employer usually requires a different visa route, not a simple amendment

Other limitations

  • study rights are not the main purpose and may be limited
  • self-employment is not permitted under ICT status
  • side gigs/freelance local work are not permitted
  • public benefits rights are not created by this visa
  • compliance with immigration conditions remains mandatory

Common Mistake

Assuming you can “switch jobs later” once inside South Africa. In practice, that is a major legal issue and may require a new visa category, often from abroad depending on current rules.

9. Duration, validity, entries, and stay rules

Validity and maximum stay

The ICT work visa is generally issued for up to 4 years.

Renewal and extension

Current South African rules are widely understood to provide that the ICT visa may not be renewed or extended beyond the allowed period. Applicants should verify the latest wording and practice before applying.

Entries

Many temporary residence work visas are issued with multiple-entry functionality for the validity period, but applicants must check the visa label and mission practice.

When the clock starts

Usually:

  • the visa has an issuance date and validity period
  • stay is governed by the visa conditions and approved dates

Check the actual visa sticker/endorsement carefully.

Overstays

Overstaying in South Africa can lead to serious consequences, including:

  • fines or administrative sanctions
  • being declared undesirable
  • future visa problems

South Africa has historically enforced overstay consequences strictly.

Grace periods

Do not assume a grace period unless an official source specifically provides one. South Africa is not a country where applicants should rely on informal grace-period assumptions.

10. Complete document checklist

Document lists vary by mission, but the following is the most complete practical structure based on official South African visa requirements for temporary residence and ICT-specific evidence.

A. Core documents

Document What it is Why needed Common mistakes
Completed application form Official temporary residence form Starts the legal application Old form version, unsigned form
Valid passport Travel document Identity and visa placement Expiring soon, damaged passport
Visa fee proof Receipt/payment confirmation Shows fee paid Wrong fee amount or wrong account
Appointment confirmation Submission booking proof if required Needed for access to VAC/mission Missing printout/email

B. Identity/travel documents

  • passport biodata page
  • previous passports if requested
  • photographs meeting mission specifications
  • lawful residence proof in country of application if applying outside nationality country

C. Financial documents

Possible documents:

  • salary slips
  • bank statements
  • employer maintenance/support letter
  • proof of employer-covered accommodation or assignment package

Why needed

To show the applicant can maintain themselves and that the transfer is genuine and financially supported.

Common mistakes

  • unexplained large deposits
  • statements too old
  • inconsistent salary figures

D. Employment/business documents

This is the heart of the ICT application.

  • letter from the foreign employer confirming employment
  • letter confirming transfer to South Africa
  • proof that the South African host is a branch/subsidiary/affiliate
  • South African host employment contract or assignment contract
  • job description
  • duration of assignment
  • undertaking that the employee will leave at end of assignment
  • undertaking relating to repatriation costs if required
  • skills transfer plan or commitment if required by current checklist
  • company registration documents if requested
  • tax/VAT/company registration evidence where requested

Common mistakes

  • no proof of corporate relationship
  • contradictory job titles
  • assignment letter not signed
  • no exact start/end dates

E. Education documents

Potentially required depending on role:

  • diplomas/degrees
  • professional certificates
  • SAQA evaluation only if specifically required for another category or local checklist; not always core for ICT, so verify

F. Relationship/family documents

For accompanying family members:

  • marriage certificate
  • birth certificates
  • proof of partnership where unmarried partner route is accepted
  • custody/consent documents for children

G. Accommodation/travel documents

May include:

  • accommodation confirmation
  • host letter
  • lease
  • temporary housing booking
  • travel itinerary if requested

H. Sponsor/invitation documents

  • host company support letter
  • HR contact details
  • corporate relationship documents
  • repatriation undertaking
  • confirmation of position and salary/benefits

I. Health/insurance documents

  • medical report
  • radiological report, where required
  • health insurance or travel medical cover, if locally requested

J. Country-specific extras

Depending on mission:

  • local residence permit
  • police clearance from current country of residence
  • legalized or apostilled civil documents
  • local language translations

K. Minor/dependent-specific documents

  • unabridged/full birth certificate where required
  • parental consent affidavits
  • court orders
  • adoption records
  • school letters if relevant

L. Translation / apostille / notarization needs

If a document is not in English, a certified translation may be required.

Some civil or corporate documents may need:

  • notarization
  • legalization
  • apostille

This varies by country and mission. Check local instructions.

M. Photo specifications

Photo specifications can vary by mission or visa center. Use the exact current official dimensions/background rules required by your application location.

Pro Tip

Create a two-part employer pack: 1. foreign employer letter set
2. South African host letter set
This makes the transfer logic much easier for the case officer to follow.

11. Financial requirements

Is there a fixed minimum fund amount?

A single clear publicly posted minimum maintenance amount specifically for ICT is not consistently published across all official channels. Because of that, applicants should not assume a universal amount.

What usually matters

Authorities usually want to see that:

  • you will be financially maintained during your stay
  • the employment and transfer package is genuine
  • you will not become a public burden
  • your salary/support is credible and documented

Acceptable proof

  • employment contract showing remuneration
  • recent payslips
  • employer letter covering salary, housing, relocation, insurance, flights, or allowances
  • personal bank statements, if requested
  • sponsor/company maintenance undertaking

Hidden costs to budget for

  • police certificates
  • medical/radiology exams
  • document legalization
  • translations
  • visa center service fees
  • courier charges
  • relocation expenses
  • school costs for children
  • deposits for housing and utilities

Currency issues

If your salary is paid outside South Africa:

  • provide clear currency conversion context
  • ensure salary figures are consistent across documents

12. Fees and total cost

South African visa fees and service charges vary by location and can change. Always check the latest official mission or Department-linked application channel.

Typical cost categories

Cost item Notes
Visa application fee Varies by mission/location
Service center/VAC fee Often separate where outsourced intake is used
Biometrics fee May be included in service fee or separately charged
Medical exam fee Paid to doctor/radiology provider
Police certificate cost Depends on issuing country
Translation/notary/apostille Country-specific and can be significant
Courier fee If passport return is couriered
Dependent application fee Separate application usually means separate fees
Travel/relocation cost Flights, temporary housing, settling-in expenses

Exact fee guidance

Because exact fees differ by country of application, this guide does not state a single figure unless the official page for your location confirms it. Check the latest official fee page for your mission or official application channel.

Warning

Do not rely on old fee screenshots or third-party blogs. South African mission fee schedules can change and may be payable in local currency.

13. Step-by-step application process

1. Confirm the correct visa

Make sure your case is truly an intra-company transfer, not:

  • a business visit
  • a general work case
  • a critical skills case

2. Gather documents

Collect both:

  • general temporary residence documents
  • ICT-specific employer and transfer documents

3. Complete the official form

Use the current official temporary residence application form and any local submission forms required by the mission/VAC.

4. Pay fees

Pay the correct fee as instructed by the official channel for your country.

5. Book biometrics/interview if needed

Many applicants must attend in person for:

  • document submission
  • biometrics
  • possible interview

6. Submit application

Usually done:

  • at the South African mission abroad, or
  • through the officially designated visa application center in that country

7. Upload/send documents if required

Some locations use digital pre-upload plus physical submission.

8. Complete medicals/police checks

Have these prepared before submission unless the local process says otherwise.

9. Track application

Use the official tracking method provided by the mission or official submission center.

10. Answer additional document requests

Respond quickly and fully.

11. Receive decision

If approved, check:

  • visa validity dates
  • number of entries
  • employer name
  • category endorsement

12. Visa issuance / passport collection

Collect passport or receive courier return.

13. Travel to South Africa

Carry a copy of your employer transfer pack.

14. Arrival steps

Report to employer, arrange tax and practical local setup.

15. Ongoing compliance

Comply with all visa conditions and departure requirements.

14. Processing time

Official standard times

A single reliable universal processing time for ICT visas is not consistently published across all official South African channels. Processing can vary substantially by:

  • mission
  • nationality
  • security checks
  • completeness
  • workload

What affects timing

  • missing documents
  • poor employer documentation
  • police clearance delays
  • background checks
  • peak seasons
  • local mission staffing
  • corporate relationship complexity

Priority options

Official priority or premium processing is not consistently available for this route across all locations. If your local mission offers expedited handling, it should be confirmed on an official page.

Practical expectation

Applicants should generally apply well in advance and avoid last-minute transfer planning.

Pro Tip

For corporate moves, start document gathering 8–12 weeks before the intended application date, even if the actual visa decision may come faster or slower.

15. Biometrics, interview, medical, and police checks

Biometrics

Often required through in-person submission channels.

Interview

Not all applicants are interviewed, but an interview or document questioning can occur.

Typical questions

  • Who do you work for now?
  • What is the relationship between the foreign company and the South African host?
  • What will you do in South Africa?
  • How long is the assignment?
  • Will you return to your home country after the assignment?

Medicals

South African temporary residence applications commonly require:

  • a medical report
  • a radiological report, subject to exemptions and current instructions

Police clearance

Applicants often need police clearance certificates from countries where they have resided for the required period under South African rules/checklists.

Validity

Medical and police documents can become stale quickly. Use recent documents that meet local submission validity rules.

16. Approval rates / refusal patterns / practical reality

Official approval data

Publicly available official approval-rate statistics specifically for the ICT visa are not readily published in a clear applicant-facing format.

Practical refusal patterns

Most refusals appear linked to:

  • weak or missing transfer evidence
  • inadequate corporate relationship proof
  • incomplete statutory documents
  • incorrect visa category
  • inconsistent assignment details
  • police/medical compliance issues

No reliable official percentage should be assumed.

17. How to strengthen the application legally

Make the transfer story obvious

Your file should answer, in order:

  1. Who is the foreign employer?
  2. Who is the South African host?
  3. How are they related?
  4. What is your current role abroad?
  5. What role will you perform in South Africa?
  6. Why is your transfer needed?
  7. How long will you stay?
  8. How and when will you leave?

Use a strong employer letter set

The best applications include:

  • one foreign employer letter
  • one SA host letter
  • one transfer/assignment letter
  • one employment contract or assignment agreement

All should align perfectly.

Explain unusual issues

If there are:

  • recent title changes
  • salary changes
  • name discrepancies
  • prior visa refusals
  • long residence in multiple countries

explain them clearly in a signed cover letter.

Organize evidence cleanly

Use tabs or a PDF index.

Check consistency

Dates, salary, job title, and company names must match across every document.

18. Insider tips, practical hacks, and smart applicant strategies

Legal Tips and Common Applicant Strategies

1. Build a “relationship proof” bundle for the companies

Include official documents showing the foreign company and South African host are linked.

2. Put the assignment period in bold in all employer letters

This reduces confusion about whether the transfer is temporary.

3. Use one exact job title everywhere

Even small title differences can trigger questions.

4. Explain who pays for what

If housing, school fees, flights, or insurance are covered by the employer, say so clearly.

5. Pre-check police certificate validity

Many delays happen because the certificate is too old by submission time.

6. Bring hard copies even if you uploaded online

Some centers or officers still want to inspect originals.

7. For families, synchronize civil documents early

Birth and marriage certificates are often the slowest part.

8. Be honest about prior refusals

Disclose them if asked and attach the refusal notice plus explanation.

9. Do not contact the mission too early or too often

Escalate only when: – processing is well beyond normal time – there is a specific urgent corporate start-date issue – the mission invites further communication

10. If reapplying after refusal, change the evidence, not just the cover letter

A reapplication without fixing the actual problem often fails again.

19. Cover letter / statement of purpose guidance

When needed

A cover letter is not always explicitly mandatory, but it is highly advisable for ICT applications.

What to include

  • who you are
  • your current employer
  • relationship between foreign and SA entities
  • your role abroad
  • your role in South Africa
  • transfer dates
  • why the assignment is necessary
  • confirmation that you will comply with visa terms and leave at the end
  • list of attached documents

What not to say

  • vague claims like “I want opportunities in South Africa”
  • anything suggesting open-ended migration if your route is temporary
  • inconsistent explanations with the employer documents

Sample outline

  1. Applicant identification
  2. Current employment details
  3. Corporate relationship explanation
  4. Assignment purpose and duration
  5. South African host details
  6. Compliance and departure undertaking
  7. Document index reference

20. Sponsor / inviter guidance

Who sponsors in ICT cases?

Usually:

  • the foreign employer
  • the South African host entity
  • sometimes both jointly in the evidence pack

What sponsor/employer letters should include

  • company letterhead
  • registration details
  • contact person
  • applicant’s full name and passport number
  • current position
  • transfer position in South Africa
  • start and end date
  • salary/remuneration/benefits
  • confirmation of corporate relationship
  • repatriation undertaking if required
  • signature by authorized person

Common sponsor mistakes

  • no exact dates
  • no proof of authority of signatory
  • no explanation of company relationship
  • unsigned letters
  • inconsistent salary or role details

21. Dependents, spouse, partner, and children

Are dependents allowed?

Yes, but they generally need separate appropriate visas.

Who may qualify

  • spouse
  • legally recognized partner, if accepted under the relevant route and evidence standard
  • dependent children

Proof required

  • marriage certificate
  • relationship evidence for life partners where applicable
  • birth certificates
  • custody/consent documents for minors

Work/study rights of dependents

Dependents usually do not automatically get unrestricted work rights just because the principal holds an ICT visa. They may need their own authorization for work or study.

Children

Children may usually accompany, but school-age children may need the proper study-related authorization depending on age and schooling arrangement.

Timeline strategy

For families, consider:

  • filing together if the local mission allows coordinated submissions
  • or filing principal first, then dependents, if timing or documents require

22. Work rights, study rights, and business activity rules

Work rights

Activity Allowed? Notes
Work for approved SA host entity Yes Core purpose of visa
Work for another employer No Not allowed without proper new authorization
Freelancing No Not compatible with ICT status
Self-employment No Not permitted on ICT
Side income from local work No High risk of breach

Study rights

Study activity Allowed? Notes
Full-time degree study as main purpose No Use study visa
Incidental short course Limited Must not conflict with main visa purpose; verify if formal authorization is needed
Children attending school Possible Child may need own proper status

Business activity rules

The visa allows employment for the approved host entity, not independent business operation.

Passive income

Passive income like investments abroad is a separate tax/compliance issue, but it does not convert the visa into a business route.

23. Travel rules and border entry issues

Entry clearance vs final admission

A visa allows you to travel to South Africa, but final admission is always at the border.

Documents to carry on arrival

Carry:

  • passport with visa
  • copy of approval letter if any
  • host company letter
  • assignment letter
  • accommodation details
  • return/onward plan if available
  • family documents if traveling together

Re-entry

If your visa is issued for multiple entries, re-entry is generally allowed during validity. Always confirm the endorsement.

New passport issues

If your passport expires while the visa is still valid, travel with both passports if permitted and verify official requirements before traveling.

24. Extension, renewal, switching, and conversion

Can it be extended?

Generally, the South African ICT visa is understood to be non-renewable beyond the maximum allowed period, which is usually up to 4 years.

Can it be switched inside South Africa?

This is highly restricted and depends on current immigration law and your existing status. South Africa is not generally known for broad in-country switching rights from temporary categories.

Changing employer

Not allowed within ICT conditions. A move to a different employer would normally require a different work authorization.

Practical takeaway

If there is any long-term plan, discuss early whether another work category is more suitable from the start.

25. Permanent residency and citizenship pathway

Does ICT lead directly to PR?

Usually no direct PR pathway is associated with the ICT visa itself.

Can it help indirectly?

Possibly, but only if the person later becomes eligible under another route, such as:

  • a different work visa category that supports long-term residence
  • a permanent residence category under South African immigration law

Citizenship

Citizenship is indirect and would only become relevant after lawful long-term residence and permanent residence, subject to South African nationality law.

Warning

If permanent settlement is your main goal, the ICT route may not be the best starting visa.

26. Taxes, compliance, and legal obligations

Tax

Working in South Africa can create:

  • South African income tax obligations
  • possible tax residence issues depending on duration and facts
  • payroll withholding obligations by the employer

Applicants should take professional tax advice. Immigration approval does not settle tax status.

Compliance obligations

  • work only within visa conditions
  • maintain valid passport
  • depart before visa expiry
  • keep copies of approval documents
  • comply with any registration or employer onboarding rules
  • avoid overstay

Overstays and violations

South Africa can impose harsh consequences for overstays, including undesirable status.

27. Country-specific or nationality-specific exceptions

Visa waiver confusion

Some nationalities can enter South Africa visa-free for short visits, but this does not authorize ICT work. Work authorization is still required.

Location-specific filing rules

Some missions require you to apply:

  • in your country of nationality, or
  • in your country of legal residence

This is not uniform worldwide. Verify with the relevant South African mission.

Security screening differences

Certain nationalities may face longer background checks. Official timing may not be publicly broken down by nationality.

28. Special cases and edge cases

Minors

Not a typical principal ICT category. If a very young applicant somehow falls into a lawful work arrangement, legal and labor issues become highly specialized.

Divorced/separated parents

Children accompanying one parent may need:

  • notarized consent
  • court order
  • sole custody proof

Adopted children

Adoption orders and legal proof of parentage may be needed.

Same-sex spouses/partners

South African law recognizes same-sex marriages. Same-sex spouses should generally be treated equally if the relationship documents are legally valid.

Stateless persons/refugees

These cases are highly fact-specific and require direct official guidance.

Dual nationals

Apply and travel carefully using the same passport where possible to avoid record mismatch.

Prior refusals or overstays

Disclose honestly and explain clearly.

Criminal records

A criminal record may trigger refusal depending on nature, seriousness, and current law.

Applying from a third country

Often possible only if you are lawfully resident there, but mission rules vary.

Name/gender marker mismatch

Provide legal change-of-name documents and, where needed, a short explanation letter linking identities.

29. Common myths and mistakes

Myth vs Fact

Myth Fact
“I can use visa-free entry and start working while the company sorts my papers.” False. Work requires proper authorization before working.
“ICT is basically the same as any job offer visa.” False. It requires a genuine internal company transfer.
“I can renew ICT indefinitely.” Generally false. It is usually capped and non-renewable beyond the legal limit.
“My spouse can automatically work because I have an ICT visa.” False. Dependents usually need their own authorization for work.
“If I have the visa, border officers must admit me.” False. Final admission is always subject to border control.
“A cover letter is optional, so it doesn’t matter.” In practice, a strong cover letter often helps clarify the entire transfer case.

30. Refusal, appeal, administrative review, and reapplication

After a refusal

You should receive a refusal notice or reason.

Is there an appeal?

South African immigration processes can allow review or appeal mechanisms in some contexts, but the exact remedy, deadline, and forum depend on:

  • the type of decision
  • where it was made
  • the wording of the refusal
  • current law and procedure

Do not assume a universal appeal path.

Reapplication

Often possible, but only after fixing the real problem.

No refund

Visa application fees are generally non-refundable after processing begins.

When to get legal help

Get immigration legal advice if:

  • the refusal alleges misrepresentation
  • there are criminal/security findings
  • there is a complex procedural unfairness issue
  • you must challenge an incorrect legal interpretation

31. Arrival in South Africa: what happens next?

At immigration

You may be asked:

  • where you will stay
  • which company you will work for
  • how long you will remain

In the first 7–30 days

Practical post-arrival tasks may include:

  • employer onboarding
  • tax registration/payroll setup
  • bank account setup
  • local SIM
  • housing arrangement
  • school enrollment for children
  • medical cover activation if employer-provided

Keep records

Store copies of:

  • visa
  • passport
  • employment contract
  • employer letters
  • police and medical documents

32. Real-world timeline examples

Scenario 1: Solo worker on ICT

  • Weeks 1–3: gather employer letters, passport, police, medicals
  • Week 4: submit application
  • Weeks 5–10: processing and possible additional document request
  • Week 11: approval
  • Week 12: travel and start assignment

Scenario 2: Worker with spouse and child

  • Weeks 1–4: principal and family civil documents, school planning
  • Week 5: coordinated submissions
  • Weeks 6–12: processing
  • Weeks 13–14: passport return and travel
  • First month in SA: school enrollment, tax and banking setup

Scenario 3: Urgent senior specialist transfer

  • Week 1: corporate pack prepared by legal/HR team
  • Week 2: medicals/police fast-tracked where possible
  • Week 3: submission
  • Following weeks: dependent on mission speed and checks

33. Ideal document pack structure

Recommended file order

  1. Cover letter/index
  2. Application form
  3. Passport and photos
  4. Fee receipt
  5. Foreign employer letter
  6. South African host letter
  7. Assignment/transfer letter
  8. Employment contract
  9. Corporate relationship evidence
  10. Salary/financial proof
  11. Medical/radiology
  12. Police clearances
  13. Accommodation/travel documents
  14. Family documents if applicable

Naming convention

Use simple names such as:

  • 01_Cover_Letter.pdf
  • 02_Passport.pdf
  • 03_Foreign_Employer_Letter.pdf
  • 04_SA_Host_Letter.pdf

Scan tips

  • color scans
  • all pages complete
  • no cut-off edges
  • legible stamps/signatures
  • one PDF per section unless the mission says otherwise

34. Exact checklists

Pre-application checklist

  • Confirm ICT is the correct visa
  • Confirm application location/jurisdiction
  • Check latest official local checklist
  • Confirm passport validity
  • Obtain employer transfer documents
  • Obtain police clearance(s)
  • Obtain medical/radiology reports
  • Gather family documents if needed
  • Check fee amount and payment method

Submission-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Printed form
  • Appointment confirmation
  • Fee proof
  • Full document set
  • Originals and copies if required
  • Photos
  • Pen and contact details

Biometrics/interview-day checklist

  • Passport
  • Appointment letter
  • Employer contact information
  • Copy of full application pack
  • Prepared answers on your role and transfer

Arrival checklist

  • Passport with visa
  • Employer contact
  • Accommodation details
  • Copies of assignment documents
  • Local transport plan from airport

Extension/renewal checklist

Not generally applicable in the ordinary sense because ICT is usually not renewable beyond the maximum lawful period. Verify current rules.

Refusal recovery checklist

  • Read refusal reasons carefully
  • Identify missing/weak evidence
  • Correct inconsistencies
  • obtain stronger corporate relationship proof
  • refresh expired police/medical documents
  • decide between reapplication and formal review

35. FAQs

1. Is the South Africa ICT visa the same as a general work visa?

No. ICT is specifically for internal company transfers within a related corporate group.

2. How long can I stay on an ICT visa?

Usually up to 4 years, subject to the approved period and current rules.

3. Can I renew it after 4 years?

Generally no, not under the ordinary ICT rules. Verify the latest official position.

4. Can I change employers on this visa?

No. The visa is tied to the approved host entity and transfer basis.

5. Can I apply if I was just hired by the South African company?

Usually no, not as ICT. That sounds more like a general work or critical skills case.

6. Do I need a contract with the South African entity?

Usually yes, or at least a clear assignment/employment arrangement with the host entity.

7. Do I need proof that the two companies are related?

Yes. This is one of the most important parts of the file.

8. Can my spouse come with me?

Usually yes, through a separate suitable visa application.

9. Can my spouse work in South Africa automatically?

No. Separate work authorization is usually needed.

10. Can my child attend school?

Possibly, but the child may need the proper visa/status for schooling.

11. Is there a minimum salary?

A single universal ICT-specific salary figure is not clearly published across all official channels. Check the latest official requirements.

12. Do I need bank statements?

Possibly. It depends on the checklist and whether employer support documents fully cover maintenance concerns.

13. Is a medical exam required?

Usually yes, including medical and often radiological reports, subject to exemptions and current rules.

14. Is a police clearance certificate required?

Usually yes, according to the relevant residence-history rules and local checklist.

15. Can I apply from inside South Africa?

Often restricted depending on your current status and the specific legal route. Many applicants apply from abroad.

16. Can I enter visa-free first and then start work?

No. Visa-free entry for tourism/business visits does not authorize ICT work.

17. Is there premium processing?

Not consistently. Check your local official mission/application center.

18. How do I prove the company relationship?

Use registration records, corporate structure documents, group letters, and any official evidence the mission accepts.

19. What if my title abroad and in South Africa are different?

Explain it clearly. Role changes are possible, but the transfer narrative must still make sense.

20. What if my assignment is shorter than a year?

That can still be possible if the transfer is genuine and documented.

21. Can I study part-time while on ICT?

Only very limited incidental study may be possible. This is not a study visa.

22. Will ICT time count toward permanent residence?

Usually not in a direct way. This is mainly a temporary assignment route.

23. Can I leave and re-enter South Africa during the assignment?

Usually yes if your visa is valid and allows multiple entries. Check the visa label.

24. What if my passport expires while my visa is valid?

You may need to travel with both passports, but verify official travel rules before doing so.

25. What happens if I overstay?

You may face severe immigration penalties, including being declared undesirable.

26. Can the host company be a client rather than an affiliate?

Usually no for ICT. The host should be a qualifying related entity, not just a commercial customer.

27. Do I need original signed employer letters?

Usually yes, or documents meeting the official submission standards of your mission.

28. Can I use scanned signatures?

Some missions accept them, some may not. Check local official instructions.

29. Can unmarried partners accompany the ICT holder?

Possibly, but evidence standards are typically stricter than for married spouses.

30. What is the biggest reason ICT applications fail?

Usually weak proof that the case is a genuine intra-company transfer.

36. Official sources and verification

Below are official sources relevant to South African visas, immigration law, and consular processing. Always verify your exact application location and current checklist before applying.

  • Department of Home Affairs, South Africa: https://www.dha.gov.za/
  • Department of Home Affairs, Immigration Services: https://www.dha.gov.za/index.php/immigration-services
  • South African Government, Immigration Act 13 of 2002: https://www.gov.za/documents/immigration-act
  • South African Government, Immigration Regulations, 2014: https://www.gov.za/documents/immigration-regulations-2014-22-may-2014-0000
  • Department of International Relations and Cooperation, South African missions directory: https://www.dirco.gov.za/foreign/bilateral/index.html
  • South African High Commission London, visas and permits information: https://www.southafricahouse.uk/consular/visas-and-permits/
  • South African Consulate-General New York, visa information: https://www.southafrica-newyork.net/homeaffairs/visa.htm
  • South African Embassy Washington, visa services: https://www.saembassy.org/consular/visas.htm

Source notes

Because South African visa application mechanics differ by mission, applicants should use: 1. the main Department of Home Affairs legal framework
2. the relevant South African embassy/high commission/consulate page for their country
3. the exact local checklist and fee instructions for that post

37. Final verdict

The South African ICT visa is best for genuine multinational internal transfers where the employee already works abroad for a qualifying company and is being sent to a related South African entity for a temporary assignment.

Biggest benefits

  • purpose-built for internal transfers
  • lawful work authorization in South Africa
  • suitable for specialists, managers, and internal corporate assignments
  • family can often accompany through separate visas

Biggest risks

  • weak proof of company relationship
  • using the wrong visa category
  • assuming the visa can later be freely renewed or converted
  • incomplete police/medical/civil documentation
  • employer letters that do not match each other

Top preparation advice

  • make the internal transfer structure crystal clear
  • use consistent dates, titles, and salary figures
  • verify your mission’s current checklist and fees
  • apply early
  • do not assume ICT is a settlement route

When to consider another visa

Consider another route if: – you are being hired directly by a South African employer – your goal is long-term residence from the start – you are an entrepreneur or investor – you need broader labor-market flexibility

Information gaps or items to verify before applying

  • Exact current fee for your application location
  • Whether your application must be filed in your nationality country or legal residence country
  • Current local checklist for ICT-specific documents
  • Whether a skills transfer plan is explicitly required by your mission/checklist
  • Whether original ink signatures are required on employer letters
  • Current medical and radiological report forms and validity windows
  • Current police clearance rules by residence history and nationality
  • Whether dependents can file simultaneously at your mission
  • Whether your visa, if approved, will be issued as single or multiple entry
  • Any recent changes to in-country change-of-status rules
  • Current overstay enforcement practice and undesirable-status consequences
  • Any recent changes to South African remote work or other alternative work routes that may be more appropriate for your case

By visa

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *