The Department of Communications and Digital Technologies has launched a formal Request for Information to explore restructuring options and partnership frameworks for the embattled South African Post Office, aiming to inject investment, enhance efficiency, and revitalise its core services. The initiative invites proposals on asset optimisation, joint ventures, revenue-sharing agreements, build-operate-transfer arrangements, infrastructure leases, and managed service contracts that could bolster postal, courier, digital, financial inclusion, and government delivery functions across the country.
This effort aligns with the Post Office’s broader turnaround strategy under business rescue, where practitioners have long emphasised the necessity of collaborative models to generate sustainable revenue streams once their oversight concludes. The department highlighted that such alliances would reinforce the entity’s nationwide presence while enabling partners to broaden their investment portfolios and service offerings. Interested parties can access the RFI document via the department’s and Post Office’s official websites for submissions, as detailed in the announcement, according to Department of Communications and Digital Technologies.
Business rescue practitioner Anoosh Rooplal noted earlier this year that, despite evaluating 59 unsolicited proposals by February 2025—covering digital services, infrastructure-as-a-service, financial products, and logistics—none proved viable or balanced, often appearing designed to exploit the organisation’s remaining resources during its vulnerable recovery phase. A dedicated task team, comprising the Post Office, National Treasury, and the department, has since been formed to prioritise equitable partnerships and investigate alternative funding mechanisms.
In a separate revenue-generating proposal, the Post Office’s practitioners have urged the Independent Communications Authority of South Africa to impose penalties on courier firms delivering parcels under 1kg, with fines directed exclusively towards supporting the state-owned entity. This stems from the Post Office’s longstanding monopoly on such items under the Postal Services Act of 1998, a privilege extended multiple times but currently under ministerial review announced in March 2025. Ongoing legal disputes involve the South African Express Parcels Association, Takealot, and PostNet, challenging the regulator’s interpretation of reserved services.
The monopoly’s preservation is viewed as critical by regional management, particularly in KwaZulu-Natal, where oversight visits revealed strong advocacy for legislative protections to capture income from the booming e-commerce sector. Portfolio committee member Sibongiseni Vilakazi, following a February inspection, reported consensus that securing these advantages could enable self-sufficiency. South Africa’s parcel delivery market has expanded rapidly, with e-commerce volumes surging over 30 per cent annually since 2020, yet the Post Office handles only a fraction due to competitive encroachments, according to ICASA Annual Report 2024.
This multi-pronged approach reflects mounting pressure to stabilise an institution that has faced repeated bailouts totalling billions of rand while grappling with legacy debts, operational inefficiencies, and digital disruption. Successful partnerships could modernise its 1,200-plus branch network into multi-purpose hubs for government services and financial access in underserved areas, potentially mirroring models adopted by postal operators in Kenya and Brazil. The RFI process, combined with regulatory enforcement, signals a decisive pivot towards commercial viability amid South Africa’s evolving logistics landscape.

