NCR & the law
The National Credit Act (NCA) explained
By Lerato Molefe · 6 min read · Updated 24 June 2026

The National Credit Act, commonly the NCA, is the South African law that governs credit agreements, lending and debt review, and it created the National Credit Regulator, established debt review as a formal debt-relief process, and set rules that protect consumers from reckless lending and over-indebtedness, with the clearance certificate and fee ceilings all flowing from it.
Understanding the NCA helps you see why debt review works the way it does and what rights you have.
This page explains what the NCA is, the key sections behind debt review and the consumer protections it gives you.
What the National Credit Act is
The National Credit Act (commonly the NCA) is the main law regulating consumer credit in South Africa. Its purposes include promoting fair and responsible lending, protecting consumers from over-indebtedness and reckless credit, and creating a regulated framework for resolving debt problems.
It applies to most credit agreements - loans, credit cards, store accounts, vehicle and home finance - and it is the legal home of debt review.
The sections behind debt review
A few key sections drive the debt-review process:
- Section 86 lets a consumer apply for debt review (the application is Form 16).
- Section 87 is where the magistrate's court makes the restructuring a binding order.
- Section 88 protects you from legal action and repossession on the debts in your plan while you pay.
Together these turn an informal struggle into a court-backed plan with real legal protection.
Consumer protections in the NCA
The NCA gives consumers important rights:
- Protection from reckless lending - lenders must check affordability before granting credit.
- The right to debt review if you are over-indebted.
- Regulated fees for debt counselling, capped by the NCR.
- Access to complaints through the NCR and the National Financial Ombud.
These protections are why debt review is safer and fairer than informal arrangements.
The NCA and the NCR
The NCA created the National Credit Regulator to enforce the Act. The NCR registers debt counsellors and credit providers, sets fee ceilings and affordability rules, and handles complaints about counsellors. So when you deal with debt review, the NCA is the law and the NCR is the regulator that puts it into practice. For complaints about a credit provider, the National Financial Ombud applies.
Frequently asked questions
What is the National Credit Act?
The NCA is the South African law governing consumer credit and debt review. It created the National Credit Regulator, established debt review and protects consumers from reckless lending and over-indebtedness.
What does NCA mean?
NCA stands for the National Credit Act, the law that regulates credit agreements and debt counselling in South Africa and underpins the entire debt-review process.
Which sections of the NCA cover debt review?
Section 86 lets you apply (Form 16), section 87 is where the court makes the restructuring an order, and section 88 protects you from legal action and repossession while you pay your plan.
What consumer protections does the NCA give?
Protection from reckless lending, the right to debt review if over-indebted, regulated and capped debt-counselling fees, and access to complaints through the NCR and the National Financial Ombud.
Is the National Credit Act the same as the NCR?
No. The NCA is the law; the National Credit Regulator (NCR) is the body created by the Act to enforce it, register counsellors and handle complaints.
Does the NCA cover all my debts?
It covers credit agreements like loans, cards, accounts and vehicle and home finance. It does not cover debts such as SARS, municipal accounts, maintenance or informal loans from family.





