Divorces Up, Marriages Down in Latest National Data

News Desk

April 23, 2026

3 min read

Data from Statistics South Africa highlight falling numbers of marriages and a rise in divorces.
Divorces Up, Marriages Down in Latest National Data
Image by olcay ertem from Pixabay

The number of marriages in South Africa is falling while divorces are rising, according to the latest release from Statistics South Africa, pointing to a steady shift in how households are formed and sustained.

A total of 102 373 marriages were registered in 2024, down from 105 123 in 2023. The longer trend is more striking. Since 2015, marriage registrations have fallen by 40 906, a decline of 28.5%.

At the same time, divorces are moving in the opposite direction. Courts granted 24 202 divorces in 2024, up from 22 230 the year before, an increase of 8.9%.

Women account for the majority of divorce filings. In 2024, there were 13 853 divorces initiated by women, representing 57.2% of all cases, compared to 7 976 filed by men, at 33.0%. The remainder of divorces were either jointly filed by both parties or one where the person who initiated the divorce being unspecified.

The fabled "seven-year itch" may also be more than a myth with the highest proportion of divorces occurring between couples who had been married for between five-to-nine-years. There were 6 451 cases of divorce between couples in this range or 26.7% of total divorces in 2024.

The median age at divorce was 46 for men and 42 for women.

Civil marriages continue to dominate, with 97 510 recorded in 2024, compared to 2 634 customary marriages (marriages recognised under African customary law and Muslim marriages), and 2 229 civil unions (marriages between same-sex partners). All categories declined year-on-year, with civil marriages dropped by 1.8%, while civil unions decreased by 3.0% and customary marriages showing the sharpest drop at 25.5%.

As previously reported by The Common Sense, this trend carries consequences that extend well beyond private life. Marriage functions as a core stabilising institution, shaping outcomes across households, communities, and the broader economy. Stable two-parent households are consistently associated with better child development, stronger educational outcomes, and with children from those households less likely to engage in risky behaviour.

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