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Home » Residents in estates and complexes can lodge disputes online from January 2026
Regulatory Law

Residents in estates and complexes can lodge disputes online from January 2026

CSOS moves disputes online from January 2026 in a major shift towards faster, transparent, and accessible justice.
Conviction Staff ReporterBy Conviction Staff ReporterDecember 28, 2025No Comments
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  • CSOS will digitise the entire dispute resolution process from 1 January 2026, allowing online lodgement, tracking, conciliation, adjudication, and enforcement.
  • The new CSOS Connect system manages Section 43 and 44 processes, urgent matters, condonation requests, and jurisdiction checks under one platform.
  • CSOS states that the shift will reduce delays, improve transparency, and enhance governance across community schemes nationwide.

The Community Schemes Ombud Service (CSOS) will significantly transform the way disputes are resolved in South Africa’s community schemes, as it fully transitions its dispute resolution processes online from 1 January 2026.

The transition forms part of CSOS’s broader digital transformation programme, aimed at modernising service delivery, improving regulatory efficiency, and strengthening governance across sectional title schemes, homeowners’ associations, and other community schemes.

In a stakeholder announcement dated 8 December 2025, CSOS described the rollout as a milestone in its mandate to provide affordable and reliable justice. The new digital system, known as CSOS Connect, will allow disputes to be lodged electronically, supported by uploaded documentation, with both applicants and respondents able to track matters in real-time.

Acting Chief Ombud Lesiba Seshoka said the move represents a shift away from fragmented, paper-based processes towards a system that aligns people, processes, data, and technology. “This platform is designed to unlock measurable value while improving ease of access for community scheme participants across the country,” he said.

End-to-end dispute resolution under one digital system

Under the new system, disputes will be managed from start to finish through a single digital workflow. This includes the full handling of Section 43 and Section 44 processes, jurisdiction checks, condonation applications, and urgent matters. Parties will be able to upload evidence, respond to opposing submissions, comment on developments, and escalate disputes where required.

CSOS said the platform supports the entire dispute resolution journey, moving matters seamlessly through conciliation, adjudication, and enforcement. Automated notices and digital communication will replace much of the manual correspondence that has historically slowed down cases, with system notifications and emails keeping all parties informed at each stage.

According to CSOS, this approach is intended to bring consistency and predictability to dispute handling, while reducing administrative bottlenecks that have often delayed outcomes for residents and scheme executives.

Improving transparency, accountability, and turnaround times

A central benefit of digitising dispute resolution, CSOS said, is improved transparency. Parties will have visibility into the status of their disputes, the steps completed, and the documents on record, reducing uncertainty and the need for repeated follow-ups.

The system also strengthens records management, evidence handling, and audit trails, supporting accountability and better oversight. CSOS believes this will contribute to faster turnaround times and improved compliance with service-level agreements, while ensuring disputes are handled in a structured and auditable manner.

By reducing reliance on manual processing, CSOS says the digital system will free up capacity within the organisation and allow staff to focus more directly on dispute resolution rather than administration.

Acknowledging contributors and support structures

Seshoka acknowledged the contribution of CSOS internal teams, business units, project stakeholders, and technical partners who were involved in requirements analysis, system development, user testing, and readiness validation.

He said their collective effort made it possible to deliver a system capable of supporting nationwide dispute resolution at scale.

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