Cape Town offers lowest monthly bill, best services for 2025/26

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  • The City of Cape Town offers the lowest monthly municipal bill of South Africaโ€™s โ€˜big fiveโ€™ metros.
  • This is based on an analysis of the 2025/26 tabled budgets for each metro across a range of water and electricity usage scenarios for properties under R5 million.ย 

โ€˜This analysis shows that even after the proposed 2025/26 increases are taken into account, Cape Town still offers the lowest total municipal bills of all major cities based on proposed rates and tariffs for properties under R5 million, along with the most functional services and largest infrastructure investment programme. While Cape Town delivers value for money in a functional, working city, the exact opposite is happening in other metros where residents are paying more and more for broken services and collapsing infrastructure,โ€™ said Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis.

โ€˜Monthly bills are significantly lower in Cape Town despite the City investing 63% more in infrastructure than Joburg over the next three years, with a South African record R39,7bn infrastructure budget that will see better roads, water, sanitation, electricity and community infrastructure for our city,โ€™ said Mayor Hill-Lewis.

 

When comparing common consumption scenarios of 10-30kl of water, and 600-850kWh of electricity for properties under R5m, Cape Townโ€™s total municipal bill is lowest in each scenario compared to other major cities including all rates, charges and VAT.

Based on these common consumption scenarios, monthly municipal bills for Cape Town households are significantly lower than their Johannesburg counterparts:

  • R1,5m home: R500 โ€“ R800 lower
  • R3m home: R740โ€“ R1060 lower
  • R5m home: R530 โ€“ R850 lower

While it is often raised that there is a considerable difference in property values between Cape Town and other cities, even when adjusting for a 25% higher property value in Cape Town, a R2.5m Cape Town home still comes out with an over R700 lower bill than a R2m home in Johannesburg based on 2025/26 rates and tariffs for each city.

Electricity increase just 2% in Cape Town

All households in Cape Town will benefit from a much lower electricity increase of just 2% compared to Eskomโ€™s 11,32% increase to municipalities nationwide for 2025/26.

This price relief will especially benefit higher consumption households, with those under R2m using 750kWh or more (and 10-30KL water) seeing total municipal bill decreases of as much as -3% including all rates and charges, with increases generally limited to around 3,5% depending on consumption levels.

 

The linking of water and sanitation fixed charges to the property band (rather than meter connection size) further contributes to the extensive relief for residential properties valued under R2m.

Meanwhile, households using 1500kWh per month (and between 10-30KL of water), will see total municipal bill increases of around 3-5% for a R3 million property, 6โ€“8% for a R4m property, and around 9 โ€“ 10,5% for a R5m property, including all rates and charges.

This is made possible by discontinuing the 10% cost of each electricity unit to fund other City services, such as area cleaning.

Instead, City-wide cleaning services will be funded by a ring-fenced tariff, the impact of which is buffered by the savings in electricity costs. This reform is aligned with the broader National Treasury-led Trading Service Reform Programme, which has a key objective, within the waste management space, to ensure services are sustainably funded via ring-fenced tariffs, as with other utility services.

Cape Townโ€™s progress in this regard puts the metro in line for Treasuryโ€™s new performance incentive grant, and a share of the performance-based R54bn available over six years which can go to further infrastructure investment and enhancements to the service.

โ€˜Our Invested for Hope budget also contains the countryโ€™s biggest ever pro-poor infrastructure investment, with 75% of our record R39,7bn budget set to directly benefit lower-income households. Over the next three years, these investments alone will create around 130 000 construction-related jobs.

โ€˜With SAโ€™s lowest unemployment rate, Cape Town is already the city where a person is most likely to find a job, and we plan to do much more to grow our economy in the years to come to the benefit especially of lower-income households,โ€™ said Cape Town Mayor Geordin Hill-Lewis.

Author: Bryan Groenendaal

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