Small businesses that rely on regional trade routes could see faster deliveries and lower logistics costs under government’s R12.5 billion plan to rebuild six of South Africa’s busiest land ports, but many SMEs say relief cannot come soon enough after years of costly delays.
Home Affairs Minister Leon Schreiber and Border Management Authority Commissioner Michael Masiapato this week announced successful bidders for the redevelopment of the Beitbridge, Lebombo, Oshoek, Maseru Bridge, Kopfontein and Ficksburg ports of entry through public private partnerships. Together, the six crossings handle about 80% of South Africa’s land border trade and passenger traffic.
The announcement lands after years of congestion that has increased fuel costs, disrupted stock cycles and squeezed already thin margins for thousands of smaller importers, exporters, retailers and transport firms.
The government said the project is expected to begin later this year or early next year at some ports, with phased construction over two to three years. Schreiber said the six ports are central to regional commerce and warned that poor border performance directly affects growth, revenue collection and national security.
“These six ports sit at the centre of regional trade and movement,” he said. “They account for an astonishing 80% of cross-border trade and passenger flows through South Africa’s land borders.” He added that “even a 5% reduction in border clearance time for legitimate goods can increase intra-regional exports by around 10%.”
SMEs count cost of slow borders
Zenande Khumalo, founder of ZK Motion Wear, an online athleisure brand supplying customers in Botswana and Namibia, said transport disruptions have repeatedly hurt delivery times and customer trust.
“When parcels are stuck at the border, clients think the business failed them. We refund orders, lose repeat customers and still carry courier costs,” she said.
Khumalo said quicker freight movement would help smaller online retailers compete beyond South Africa.
“We don’t have warehouses in every country. Border efficiency is our growth strategy,” she said.
The Border Management Authority said some trucks currently wait two to three days at major crossings such as Beitbridge during busy periods, particularly during seasonal surges.
Masiapato said the current infrastructure was never designed for modern traffic volumes.
“The days of trucks having to sit at Beitbridge for two days, three days must become a thing of the past,” Masiapato said.
New system targets non-stop freight movement
The government plans to redesign ports with separate cargo lanes, passenger lanes and pedestrian processing areas, supported by digital systems, facial recognition technology and pre-cleared freight channels. Masiapato said trusted cargo operators would be able to use green lanes without stopping once customs processes are completed inland.
“We are going to implement a non-stop border post,” he said.
That could be significant for SMEs importing stock or exporting fresh produce, clothing, hardware and manufactured goods into neighbouring markets. Seipati Mokoena, owner of KLM Food Traders, which supplies packaged foods into Lesotho, said border waiting times often destroy planning. “You can prepare stock, hire transport and secure a buyer, but one delay changes everything. Small businesses pay for inefficiency first,” he said.
While business owners welcomed the project, some cautioned that execution would matter more than announcements. Construction is expected to run for up to three years at some crossings, meaning SMEs may still face short-term disruption before seeing benefits. Still, economists say faster regional trade routes could lower operating costs, improve stock reliability and open export opportunities for smaller firms that have struggled to scale beyond South Africa.





























































