Here’s When Schools Close for the Year
As the home stretch of the academic year approaches, Gauteng families are entering their busiest planning period. Grade 12 pupils are deep in exams, teachers are finalising assessments, and parents are preparing for the long summer school holiday, a season that offers both rest and reset for households across the province.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!According to the Department of Basic Education (DBE), the fourth and final term of 2025 will end on 10 December, marking the official close of the school year and the start of the festive break. Schools will then reopen on 14 January 2026, giving learners almost five full weeks to recharge before the start of a new academic cycle that brings several important policy changes.
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Smoothing Into a More Unified School Calendar
While families look forward to the holidays, the DBE has already turned its focus to 2026. Updates to the national school calendar, gazetted earlier this year, will reshape how South Africa structures teaching time, school holidays, and term transitions.
One of the biggest changes is the end of staggered provincial calendars. For many years, inland and coastal provinces opened the school year a week apart. From 2026, this system falls away. All schools, regardless of province, will now open in the third week of January.
The change aims to streamline administration, give all learners the same number of teaching days, and reduce confusion for families who move between provinces during the year. The DBE says the updated calendar is designed to make the 2026 school year more consistent, predictable, and easy to plan for, based on feedback from parents, teachers, unions, and school governing bodies.
More Flexibility for Planners and Schools
The DBE has also removed two long-standing rules from its national policy:
- The requirement to consider traffic flow when setting holiday dates
- The prohibition on starting a school term on a Monday
Both restrictions have been scrapped to allow more flexibility. This gives planners more freedom to align term dates, holidays, and public holidays in ways that protect teaching time and reduce unnecessary disruption.
The department says the changes follow years of consultation and are part of a wider effort to ensure the school calendar supports learning quality, family stability, and administrative efficiency.
What Gauteng Parents Need to Know for 2026
Here is the proposed 2026 school calendar to help families plan:
FIRST TERM
Schools open: 14 January 2026
Schools close: 27 March 2026
School holidays: 28 March – 7 April 2026
SECOND TERM
Schools open: 8 April 2026
Schools close: 26 June 2026
Public holidays:
– Freedom Day (27 April)
– Workers’ Day (1 May)
– Youth Day (16 June)
Special school holiday: 15 June
School holidays: 27 June – 20 July 2026
THIRD TERM
Schools open: 21 July 2026
Schools close: 23 September 2026
Public holidays: National Women’s Day long weekend (9–10 August)
School holidays: 24 September – 5 October 2026
FOURTH TERM
Schools open: 6 October 2026
Schools close: 9 December 2026
Public holidays during the break:
– Day of Reconciliation (16 December)
– Christmas Day (25 December)
– Day of Goodwill (26 December)
Why These Changes Matter for Families
1. Easier Planning for Households
A single national calendar removes the frustration of juggling different term dates when families move provinces or have children in different regions. It also creates clearer patterns for school transport, after-care programmes, and tutoring schedules.
2. Better Balance Across the School Year
The updated calendar aims to reduce long, tiring terms and prevent shorter terms from feeling rushed. More balanced terms support better pacing of lessons, revision, and assessment, a change teachers and learners have called for.
3. More Predictable Travel and Budgeting
For many Gauteng families, December and January are busy travel months. A consistent December closing date and January start give parents the chance to plan around:
- affordable travel periods
- childcare needs
- holiday activities
- uniform and stationary budgets
This consistency is especially useful for parents working shifts or contract jobs.
Looking Ahead to 2026
The 2026 calendar marks one of the most significant shifts in South Africa’s schooling structure in nearly two decades. It reflects a push to modernise the system and respond to concerns raised by parents, teachers, and education specialists, from curriculum pacing to exam readiness and learner fatigue.
For Gauteng families, these updates provide the opportunity to plan, alleviate the pressure that typically builds in January, and establish routines that support learners from the very first week of school.
Prepare Today for a Smoother 2026
Parents can begin preparing well in advance of school reopening. A few small steps now can make the transition into 2026 far easier:
- Add the 2026 dates to your calendar or family planner
- Start budgeting for uniforms, transport, and stationery
- Book travel or holiday care early to avoid last-minute stress
- Stay in touch with your school about orientation, admin days, and fee updates
- Encourage light reading, revision and enrichment activities during December
A strong start sets the tone for the entire school year. By planning, Gauteng families can ensure learners step into the classroom on 14 January 2026 feeling organised, confident, and ready to learn.



