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News

MyMzansi Digital Driving Licence Demo in South Africa

by Spencer SaborNovember 17, 2025
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    MyMzansi Digital Driving Licence Demo in South Africa
    Envato

    South Africa’s communications minister Solly Malatsi has demonstrated a prototype MyMzansi digital driving licence system. It processes a licence renewal in a matter of minutes during his opening address at the Global DPI Summit. According to technology publication MyBroadband, Malatsi described MyMzansi as “South Africa’s one-stop, zero-rated platform for government services.” He used a driver’s licence renewal to showcase the working prototype.

    During the live demo, Malatsi opened a digital wallet in the MyMzansi app. It showed a virtual driving licence card with the holder’s name, card number, licence category and outstanding traffic fines. Users select a renewal option, complete an in-app form with their ID number, name and contact details, sign digitally and capture a photo. They then proceed to a secure payment page. The demo included card payments and Apple Pay. Afterward, the renewed digital licence appeared immediately in the app.

    The digital licence includes a QR code that traffic officers can scan to verify authenticity. Malatsi argued that digital verification should help curb roadside bribery. He stated that the system will confirm on the spot whether a licence is valid.

    Experts Warn South Africa is “Not There Yet”

    While the MyMzansi digital driving licence prototype signals a major push toward digital government services, technology analyst Arthur Goldstuck has cautioned that South Africa faces significant hurdles. These challenges come before such licences can replace physical cards. Speaking to MyBroadband, the World Wide Worx CEO said “we’re definitely not there yet.” He pointed to frequent downtime at Home Affairs offices as an example of fragile state IT systems.

    Goldstuck highlighted that millions of residents still lack reliable smartphones or network coverage, despite growing mobile adoption. He argued that security must be the priority. He is calling for strong encryption, biometric verification and systems that can also function offline. Goldstuck warned that if tenders go to the “wrong vendors,” the country risks weak systems and wasted public funds.

    According to MyBroadband’s reporting on Parliament, Rikus Badenhorst, who chairs the Select Committee on Public Infrastructure and the Ministries in the Presidency, has urged the transport department to fast-track digital licences. However, the Driving Licence Card Account’s annual performance plan sets no performance targets before the 2026/27 financial year. It aims for 25% implementation of a new card project in 2026/27 and 75% in 2027/28.

    Government Push

    Government officials present MyMzansi as a way to simplify access to multiple state services through a single, zero-rated app, with the MyMzansi digital driving licence as a flagship example of what could be offered. Malatsi emphasised that the prototype connects to existing Department of Transport and NaTIS systems. It verifies credentials and issues a digital licence within minutes.

    At the same time, Goldstuck’s concerns over security, infrastructure and digital exclusion remain unanswered in detail. Authorities have not yet announced revised rollout timelines beyond the DLCA’s medium-term targets. This situation leaves the prototype as an early glimpse of a system that will still take years to implement nationwide.

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      Spencer Sabor

      Tags

      • digital driver’s licence renewal
      • digital driving licence south africa
      • driving licence card account dlca
      • mymzansi digital driving licence
      • online licence renewal south africa
      • south africa digital government services

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        • The campaign has drawn strong criticism from senior government figures. On Monday, Gauteng Premier Panyaza Lesufi wrote on X that “racists are loud and clear” and accused the banner’s creators of trying to undermine efforts to build “an all-inclusive country that recognises the injustices of apartheid”. He called on supporters of transformation to “push them back”. African News Agency Presidency spokesperson Vincent Magwenya dismissed Solidarity’s campaign as the work of a “tiny right-wing minority”, calling it “unimportant and mindless”. African News Agency Government critics of the billboard argue that it misrepresents South Africa’s transformation agenda and risks damaging the country’s image as it hosts world leaders for the G20 Summit. Solidarity, however, remains adamant that its message should be visible to local residents and international visitors, and says the Solidarity race banner legal action will continue until the courts have ruled on the legality of the removal.
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