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Your 13th Cheque Is a Legal Right: What the 2026 Labour Court Ruling Means for South African Workers

The Labour Court ruled in February 2026 that employers cannot unilaterally withdraw a 13th cheque if it forms part of your employment contract. Here is what workers and employers need to know.

10 min read
Person counting money with calculator and financial documents on a desk, representing salary and bonus rights in the workplace
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A landmark Labour Court ruling handed down on 4 February 2026 has settled a question many South African workers and employers have long debated: can a company take away a 13th cheque it has been paying for years? The short answer, confirmed by the court, is no — not without your agreement.

Here is a plain-language breakdown of the ruling, what it means for workers in KwaZulu-Natal and beyond, and how employers should adjust their approach before they end up in the same position as Avacare Health Group.

The Case: What Actually Happened

The case is formally cited as Chemical Energy, Paper, Printing, Wood and Allied Workers Union obo Members v Avacare Health Group (Pty) Ltd and Another (C438/2024) [2026] ZALCCT 18, decided on 4 February 2026.

Here is the sequence of events:

  1. Avacare Health Group (operating through Barrs Pharmaceutical Industries Ltd) decided to abolish the 13th cheque benefit it had been paying to workers
  2. In its place, the employer offered a 5.5% wage increase
  3. Of the 214 affected employees, 159 accepted the offer — many under significant financial pressure — and withdrew from the dispute
  4. The remaining 55 employees, represented by CEPPWAWU, refused to sign away their rights and pursued the legal challenge
  5. The employer argued the 13th cheque was merely a "workplace practice" and not a contractual term — meaning it could be discontinued without consent

The court rejected that argument entirely. Crucially, the employer had already conceded during earlier CCMA proceedings that the 13th cheque was a contractual right. The Labour Court found it could not then turn around and claim otherwise. The 55 employees were awarded their unpaid 13th cheques.

The distinction the court drew is one every South African worker and employer should understand clearly:

Contractual Benefit Workplace Practice
Agreed term in the employment contract or company policy A common custom or way of doing things not formally agreed
Examples: salary, guaranteed bonuses, working hours Examples: informal team lunches, ad hoc flexibility on start times
Cannot be changed without employee consent Can in principle be changed by the employer without formal agreement
Unilateral removal = breach of contract + potential unfair labour practice Changing it without consultation is risky but not automatically unlawful

The employer's mistake in the Avacare case was claiming the 13th cheque was merely a practice when it had already been treated as a contractual obligation — and had admitted as much at the CCMA. Consistency in your own legal positions matters.

Is a 13th Cheque Required by Law?

This is one of the most common misconceptions in South African employment. The BCEA does not require employers to pay a 13th cheque or any bonus. There is no statutory entitlement to a year-end bonus in South African law.

However, the obligation arises from other sources — and once it exists, it is as enforceable as your salary:

What Creates the Obligation Binding?
Written employment contract or offer letter ("13th cheque shall be paid annually") Yes — legally enforceable
Company policy document or staff handbook explicitly committing to a bonus Yes — forms part of employment terms
Collective agreement negotiated with a recognised trade union Yes — binding on all covered employees
Consistent payment every year for 5+ years with no written "discretionary" caveat Likely — creates a reasonable expectation and potential de facto right
Purely verbal promise with no documentation and no consistent history No — very difficult to enforce
Contract says "bonus at employer's sole discretion" Discretion must be exercised fairly — not guaranteed, but not arbitrary either

The Difference Between a 13th Cheque and a Performance Bonus

These two are often confused, but they carry very different legal weight:

  • A 13th cheque is typically a guaranteed additional month's salary paid annually, usually in November or December. It is not linked to performance — it is linked to continued employment. If your contract says you receive it, you receive it.
  • A performance bonus is discretionary and conditional — it depends on hitting targets, company profitability, or management assessment. Your employer has more flexibility here, but even discretionary bonuses cannot be withheld capriciously. The Apollo Tyres ruling (2013) established that the CCMA can review whether a discretionary bonus decision was made arbitrarily or unfairly.

What Workers Should Do Right Now

Whether you are currently employed and worried about changes to your bonus, or entering a new role and negotiating your contract, here is the practical checklist:

  1. Read your employment contract — does it explicitly mention a 13th cheque or annual bonus? Note the exact wording. "Shall be paid" is contractual. "At management's discretion" is not.
  2. Check your payslips and bank records — if you have been paid a consistent bonus every December for years, that payment history strengthens your claim even if the contract is silent
  3. Request any company policy documents that refer to bonuses — these form part of your terms of employment even if they are not signed
  4. Do not sign anything under pressure — if your employer is offering a "replacement benefit" in exchange for signing away your 13th cheque, as happened in the Avacare case, you have the right to decline and seek legal advice first
  5. If your employer withdraws the benefit without your agreement, you can refer an unfair labour practice dispute to the CCMA under Section 186(2)(a) of the Labour Relations Act, or approach the Labour Court directly under Section 77 of the BCEA
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What Employers Must Understand

The Avacare ruling is a warning to employers across South Africa, particularly those in retail, BPO, and manufacturing who carry large permanent workforces with historical bonus arrangements.

If you want to change or remove a contractual bonus, the process is not optional — it is legally mandated:

  1. Do not act unilaterally. Removing or reducing a contractual benefit without employee consent is a breach of contract. Full stop.
  2. Consult meaningfully. You must engage with employees — or their union — explain the commercial rationale, and genuinely attempt to reach agreement. This is not a box-ticking exercise.
  3. Give advance notice. Industry best practice is at least six months' notice for any proposed change to bonus arrangements. Notifying employees in November that there will be no December 13th cheque is a high-risk move.
  4. Get consent in writing. If employees agree to a change, document it as a formal contract amendment signed by both parties.
  5. Avoid the "carrot and stick." The court specifically criticised Avacare for offering a financial inducement to encourage acceptance while implying negative consequences for those who refused. This approach is seen as exploiting the power imbalance and can undermine your legal position.

The Established Practice Risk: If You Have Been Paying Without a Written Commitment

Many smaller employers — particularly in retail and hospitality — have been paying informal year-end bonuses for years without any written policy. They may assume they can stop at any time.

The law does not fully support that assumption. When an employer has paid a bonus consistently — every December, every year, for five or more years — without any documented "discretionary" caveat, employees develop what courts recognise as a reasonable expectation of that benefit. Suddenly stopping it without consultation can constitute an unfair labour practice under the LRA.

If you are an employer in this position, the right time to formalise your position — in writing, as a clearly discretionary benefit — was years ago. The second-best time is now. Document your bonus policy clearly, note whether it is guaranteed or discretionary, and ensure employees acknowledge it.

How This Affects the BPO and Call Centre Sector

In KZN's BPO sector, where staff turnover is high and competition for experienced agents is fierce, 13th cheques and year-end bonuses are frequently used as retention tools. The Avacare ruling reinforces something BPO employers should already know: if you put it in the contract to attract people, you cannot take it out without their agreement later.

For BPO employers building teams through ShiftMate's trial-to-hire model, this is an important moment to ensure that:

  • Offer letters are precise about whether bonuses are guaranteed or discretionary
  • Performance bonus clauses clearly state the conditions and measurement criteria
  • Any promises made verbally during recruitment are reflected accurately in the written contract

Getting this right at the offer stage is far less expensive than defending it at the Labour Court two years later.

Quick Reference: Your Rights at a Glance

Situation What You Can Do
Contract guarantees a 13th cheque and employer refuses to pay File a breach of contract claim at the Labour Court (BCEA Section 77) or civil court
Employer has paid a bonus every year for years and now refuses without consultation Refer an unfair labour practice dispute to the CCMA under LRA Section 186(2)(a)
Employer pressures you to sign away your 13th cheque in exchange for something else You can decline. Seek advice from your union or a labour lawyer before signing anything
Contract says bonus is "at employer's discretion" and it was withheld without reason The CCMA can review the decision for fairness under the Apollo Tyres precedent
No contract, no policy, no consistent history — verbal promise only Very difficult to enforce. Document any future promises immediately in writing

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Sources & References

  • IOL - Labour Court affirms employees rights 18 Feb 2026
  • ZALCCT 18 - Chemical Energy Workers Union v Avacare Health Group 4 Feb 2026
  • Cliffe Dekker Hofmeyr - Apollo Tyres bonus precedent

All legal information verified as of 28 February 2026. Consult with a labour lawyer for specific cases.

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