

uThukela District municipality (Alfred Duma, Inkosi Langalibalele, Okhahlamba) calls for public comment on proposed tariff increases, the draft budget and IDP
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- Proposed increases are available in the summary below
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The uThukela District 🏔️ in KwaZulu-Natal is presenting a particularly challenging budget for the 2026/2027 financial year. As of April 18, 2026, the biggest “shock” comes from the District Municipality itself, which serves as the Water Services Authority (WSA) for the entire region.
Because the district is currently operating with an unfunded budget, they are proposing aggressive tariff hikes to achieve “cost-reflectivity.” Let’s break down these figures together.
THE INCREASES ARE AS FOLLOWS
Staff salaries 4.75%
uThukela District Municipality (Water & Sanitation)
Since the District Municipality (DC23) manages water for everyone in the region, these figures apply to residents in Alfred Duma, Inkosi Langalibalele, and Okhahlamba.
| Proposed Increase (%) | Context / Reason | |
| Water Provision | 20.0% 🚩 | Proposed to address a non-cost-reflective tariff and an unfunded budget. |
| Sanitation | 20.0% 🚩 | Mirroring the water hike to fund aging wastewater infrastructure. |
| Bulk Water Purchase | 13.0% 💧 | The increase the District pays to uMgeni-uThukela Water. |
Local Municipality Draft Increases (Electricity, Rates & Refuse)
While the District handles the water, your local council determines the costs for your electricity, property rates, and trash collection.
| Electricity (Domestic) ⚡ | Property Rates 🏠 | Refuse Removal 🗑️ | |
| Alfred Duma (Ladysmith) | 9.01% | 4.6% | 4.6% |
| Inkosi Langalibalele (Estcourt) | 9.01% | 4.5% | 4.5% |
| Okhahlamba (Bergville) | 9.01% | 4.5% | 4.5% |
| Staff Salary Benchmark | 4.75% | 4.75% | 4.75% |
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- The 20% Water Wall: The proposed 20% water hike is more than four times the 4.75% staff salary increase given to the municipal officials. 👔
- The Unfunded Mandate: The District explicitly states in their draft budget that they are hiking tariffs by 20% because their previous budget was unfunded. This effectively means current residents are being asked to “bail out” the municipality’s historical financial mismanagement. 💸
- NERSA Alignment: Most locals are sticking to the 9.01% electricity benchmark approved by NERSA for municipal distributors. While high, it is the “standard” increase for 2026 across much of the country. 🔌
- The “Wait-and-See” on Exemptions: Interestingly, the uThukela District budget notes that they have factored in the 4.75% staff raise but may apply for an exemption due to their financial distress. If they don’t pay their staff more, the 20% service hike becomes even harder to justify to the public. ⚖️
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