How to Use SAQA and SETAs to Plan Your Education Pathway in South Africa

Navigating South Africa’s education and skills ecosystem can feel complex — but with a clear roadmap that uses SAQA (the South African Qualifications Authority) and SETAs (Sector Education and Training Authorities), you can design an NQF-aligned pathway that matches your career goals, funding options and workplace requirements. This guide gives a practical, step-by-step approach, expert tips and links to related resources for South African learners and career planners.

What are SAQA and SETAs — and why they matter for your pathway

  • SAQA oversees the National Qualifications Framework (NQF), recognises and records qualifications, and provides tools for qualification evaluation and progression planning.
  • SETAs focus on sector-specific skills planning, workplace learning, learnerships/apprenticeships and administering employer training levies/grants to grow skills in priority sectors.

Both are essential: SAQA helps you understand what a qualification means in terms of NQF level, credits and recognition; SETAs help you find how to access sectoral training, workplace-based learning and funding.

Quick comparison: SAQA vs SETA

Function SAQA SETAs
Role in NQF Custodian of the NQF framework, qualification recognition, equivalence assessments Implements sectoral skills strategy within the NQF context
Who to contact for eligibility/equivalence SAQA (evaluation of foreign qualifications, RPL guidance) Relevant SETA for sector-specific learnerships, grants and employer engagement
Training accreditation Registers qualifications and unit standards; links to Quality Councils Accredits/recognises Skills Development Providers (SDPs) and approves learnerships
Funding Not a funder Administers levy grants, learnership funding, discretionary grants (sector-dependent)

Step-by-step: Use SAQA and SETAs to plan an NQF-aligned pathway

  1. Define your career goal and target job roles

  2. Map that goal to an NQF level and qualification type

  3. Check recognised qualifications and providers via SAQA

    • Use SAQA’s public registers to verify that a qualification or provider is recognised and assigned the advertised NQF level.
    • If you have foreign qualifications or prior workplace learning, request a SAQA evaluation or explore Recognition of Prior Learning (RPL) routes to get NQF-aligned recognition.
  4. Decide between university, TVET, private college or occupational routes

  5. Identify the relevant SETA for your sector

    • Each economic sector has a SETA that manages learnerships, apprenticeships and skills development funding. Contact the sector SETA to:
      • Ask about accredited learnerships or apprenticeships that match your targeted occupational qualification.
      • Find accredited Skills Development Providers (SDPs) and employers offering workplace components.
      • Explore funding options and employer levy grants.
  6. Use learnerships, apprenticeships and workplace training strategically

    • Learnerships combine structured learning with workplace experience and often lead to an NQF-registered occupational qualification — a fast path into employment.
    • Employers can register learnerships with the SETA and apply for grants to subsidise training; learners often get a stipend.
  7. Plan for articulation and micro-credentials

Practical tools — where to check accreditation and quality

  • Verify qualifications on SAQA’s public database before you enrol.
  • Confirm the training provider’s accreditation with the relevant Quality Council:
    • Council on Higher Education (CHE) for higher education.
    • Umalusi for certain further education and school-level qualifications.
    • Quality Council for Trades and Occupations (QCTO) for occupational qualifications.
  • Ask SETAs for a list of accredited Skills Development Providers and approved learnerships.

Expert tip: Always request the qualification’s SAQA ID and NQF level in writing before enrolling — this makes it easier to verify through official registers and supports future articulation or RPL.

Funding, grants and employer engagement (how SETAs help)

  • SETAs administer training levies and often provide:
    • Support for employer-registered learnerships/apprenticeships.
    • Discretionary grants or training bursaries for qualifying learners.
    • Sector-specific scarce-skills initiatives.
  • To access funding:
    • Identify the correct SETA for the sector.
    • Work with an employer or accredited SDP to submit Workplace Skills Plans (WSPs) and training grant applications.
    • Keep clear records of learning agreements and assessments — these are needed for grant compliance.

Common pitfalls — and how to avoid them

  • Enrolling in non-accredited programmes: Always verify SAQA recognition and the accrediting Quality Council.
  • Assuming all short courses articulate: Confirm credit recognition and RPL pathways before you invest time/money.
  • Overlooking workplace experience: Many occupational qualifications require workplace assessment — plan internships/learnerships early.
  • Ignoring the sector fit: A qualification outside your target SETA may not translate to workplace opportunities in your chosen industry.

Quick checklist before you enrol

  • Have a specific career/job target and mapped NQF level.
  • Verified the qualification’s SAQA ID and NQF level.
  • Checked the provider’s accreditation with the appropriate Quality Council.
  • Confirmed whether workplace experience/learnership is required and which SETA manages it.
  • Asked about articulation, RPL and whether short courses will be credited later.
  • Explored SETA funding/learnership options with employers or SDPs.

Next steps — recommended reads and tools

By combining SAQA’s recognition and NQF-mapping with SETA-led sector opportunities and learnerships, you can create an education pathway that’s recognised, fundable and aligned to actual job outcomes. Start with a clear career goal, verify qualifications through SAQA, engage the correct SETA for sector routes and funding, and keep evidence for articulation and RPL — that’s the blueprint for a resilient South African career pathway.