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Africa / South Africa · Updated 11 March 2026

South Africa's neobanks,
by SARB licence class.

South African digital banking sits across three SARB-supervised chartered classes — commercial banks under the Banks Act 1990, mutual banks under the Mutual Banks Act 1993, and co-operative financial institutions under the Co-operative Banks Act 2007. TymeBank, Discovery Bank, and African Bank are commercial-bank licensees; Bank Zero is the mutual-bank licensee in the digital cohort. All four are CODI members at the ZAR 100,000-per-depositor-per-institution ceiling. CODI itself is new — operationally live since 1 April 2024 under Section 166 of the Financial Sector Laws Amendment Act 2021. Pre-April 2024, South Africa had no formal deposit-insurance scheme. Read the licence class and the CODI date before treating a balance as protected.

3Commercial-bank licensees in the cohort
1Mutual-bank licensee in the cohort
ZAR 100KCODI ceiling per depositor
1 Apr 2024CODI operational date
01 — The licence taxonomy

Three SARB-chartered classes,
one CODI ceiling.

South African neobanking sits across three SARB-regulated chartered classes — all supervised by the same SARB Prudential Authority, all CODI members at the same ZAR 100,000 ceiling, but with materially different capital, scope-of-business, and ownership rules. The single most common retail misread is conflating "mutual" with "fintech" — Bank Zero is a chartered SARB-licensed bank, not a payment-institution wrapper. Read the licence class on the receiving entity before assuming a balance is protected.

Commercial Bank · Banks Act 1990
TymeBank, Discovery Bank, African BankCODI ZAR 100K
Banks Act 94 of 1990SARB Prudential Authority
Universal banking surfaceDeposits + lending + FX
Mutual Bank · Mutual Banks Act 1993
Bank ZeroCODI ZAR 100K
Member-ownedNo shareholders
Lower capital, tighter scopeNo FX wholesale
CFI · Co-operative Banks Act 2007
Co-operative Financial InstitutionsNarrow licence
Limited neobank presenceCODI eligibility varies
Member-restricted scopeVerify status
Deposit protection AFRICA-ZA
Scheme
CODI
Ceiling
ZAR 100,000
Regulator
South African Reserve Bank (SARB) / Prudential Authority

Corporation for Deposit Insurance (CODI) covers up to ZAR 100,000 per qualifying depositor per SARB-licensed bank. CODI launched in 2024 — verify that the institution is a registered member and the cover is active for the account type.

Primary source: https://www.resbank.co.za/en/home/what-we-do/financial-stability/codi

03 — CODI: the new safety net (since 1 Apr 2024)

Read the licence,
and read the CODI date.

The Corporation for Deposit Insurance (CODI) is South Africa's first formal deposit-insurance scheme. It was established under Section 166 of the Financial Sector Laws Amendment Act 2021 and went into operational effect on 1 April 2024 after a multi-year build. Membership is mandatory for all SARB-licensed banks; the scheme is funded by member-bank levies and backed by the South African Reserve Bank. CODI covers up to ZAR 100,000 per qualifying depositor per institution, applied identically to commercial banks (TymeBank, Discovery Bank, African Bank) and mutual banks (Bank Zero) — the licence-class distinction at SARB does not affect deposit-insurance cover at the customer.

Pre-CODI, South Africa had no statutory deposit-insurance scheme at all. This is the part most non-South-African readers miss. Depositor protection in failure scenarios was previously handled through ad-hoc SARB resolution mechanisms and the implicit (but not legally guaranteed) backstop of the Reserve Bank. The VBS Mutual Bank failure in 2018 — in which SARB curated a partial recovery for depositors after the failure rather than triggering a statutory payout — is the case most often cited when South Africans ask what protected their money before CODI. The honest answer is that pre-April-2024 cover was not statutory; recovery in failed-bank scenarios depended on SARB resolution and curatorship, not on a state-backed compensation scheme. The CODI launch in April 2024 is therefore not a minor administrative change — it is the structural event that brought South African deposit protection in line with peer jurisdictions and materially upgraded the depositor-protection profile of every SARB-licensed bank in the country.

The payout mechanic is direct. When SARB resolves a failed institution, CODI pays out qualifying depositors up to the ZAR 100,000 ceiling without depositors needing to make a claim against the failed bank's estate, with a target settlement window measured in business days once the resolution is published. The ceiling is per depositor per institution, not per account — multiple sub-accounts inside a single Bank Zero or TymeBank profile aggregate against the same ZAR 100,000 cap. Joint-account treatment follows pass-through rules published at codi.org.za. Balances above ZAR 100,000 become unsecured claims against the resolution estate and follow the standard creditor-priority sequence.

The headline ceiling is small in dollar terms. At a USD/ZAR rate near 18.5 the cover is roughly USD 5,400 — substantially smaller than FDIC ($250,000), FSCS (£85,000), or the EU DGS harmonised ceiling (€100,000). The protection is statutory and real, but the headline figure is calibrated for the domestic median balance, not for high-net-worth or USD-equivalent use cases. Depositors with balances above ZAR 100,000 should split funds across multiple SARB-licensed institutions to layer cover. The per-institution ceiling refreshes per bank.

See the individual TymeBank review, Discovery Bank review, and Bank Zero review pages for product-level and licence-level detail on the structured rows; the Is Bank Zero safe? brief unpacks the mutual-bank licence and the CODI mechanic in greater depth. Verify current CODI status on codi.org.za and the SARB bank register on resbank.co.za before relying on the cover.

04 — The Tyme Group export

South Africa exported a digital-bank model.
GoTyme is the proof.

The single most operationally significant fact about the South African digital-banking cohort is that one of its members has already exported the model. Tyme Group, the parent operator behind TymeBank, launched GoTyme Bank Inc. in the Philippines in October 2022 as a joint venture with JG Summit Holdings (the Gokongwei family conglomerate that operates Robinsons Retail). GoTyme is not a TymeBank subsidiary — it operates under a separate BSP universal-bank licence, granted via the conversion of the Rural Bank of Cuyapo charter, with its own depositor-of-record relationship and PDIC PHP 500,000 deposit-insurance cover. The licence holders, regulators, and deposit-insurance schemes are independent.

What carried over is the operating playbook. The Pick n Pay + Boxer in-store card-kiosk distribution model that drove TymeBank's early customer-acquisition curve in South Africa was replicated in the Philippines as Robinsons Retail in-mall kiosks for GoTyme. The GoalSave tiered-savings construct in South Africa became GoSave in the Philippines, with headline rates calibrated to local market norms (TymeBank GoalSave up to ~10% APY on the bonus tier; GoTyme GoSave near 5% APY). The app architecture, KYC flow, and customer- onboarding sequence are recognisably the same product family. By 2025 GoTyme had reached roughly 6 million Philippine customers in under four years — a faster ramp than TymeBank's early SA cohort, and the proof point that the South African model travels.

The cross-reference matters for two kinds of reader. For South African depositors, it contextualises Tyme Group as a multi-jurisdiction operator rather than a single-market digital bank — the operating cadence at TymeBank ZA is set by a parent group with live operations in two distinct regulatory regimes. For comparison shoppers tracking the operator across markets, it is a structural reminder that the licence holder, not the brand, decides the depositor relationship: a TymeBank ZA customer is contracted with Tyme Bank Ltd. under SARB / CODI; a GoTyme PH customer is contracted with GoTyme Bank Inc. under BSP / PDIC. Same parent, same playbook, two independent licence holders. See the Best Neobanks in the Philippines pillar and the GoTyme review for the Philippine side of the franchise.

05 — Methodology

How this ranking is built.

Each candidate is scored on licence class (SARB Banks Act 1990 commercial-bank licence vs SARB Mutual Banks Act 1993 mutual-bank licence vs Co-operative Banks Act 2007 CFI), CODI membership status, parent backing (independent operator vs JSE-listed parent vs mutual ownership), product surface (universal commercial banking vs narrow mutual-bank deposit-and-card vs premium-tiered rewards-led), and published deposit-product terms. The ranking is editorial and explicitly excludes affiliate compensation as a ranking input — none of the structured rows on this page carry an affiliate relationship at the time of writing. Licence-status references and CODI ceiling statements were verified against the SARB bank register at resbank.co.za, the CODI scheme documentation at codi.org.za, the Financial Sector Laws Amendment Act 2021 (Section 166) as published at gov.za, each operator's deposit-product page, and reporting from Reuters, Business Day, Daily Maverick, and Moneyweb on the dates noted in data_as_of. Where SARB notices or CODI mechanics shift the underlying numbers, the relevant prose calls it out and points readers at the SARB / CODI primary sources for current status. We do not reproduce SARB-confidential supervisory ratings.

06 — Verdict

For domestic ZAR savings, the licence class is a footnote — CODI is the headline.

For domestic ZAR-denominated savings where statutory cover is load-bearing, all four structured candidates sit inside the same CODI envelope at ZAR 100,000 per depositor per institution. The licence-class distinction (commercial vs mutual) does not change the deposit-insurance ceiling — that is the headline fact, and it is structurally new since 1 April 2024. Pick TymeBank for scale, the GoalSave high-APY product, the Pick n Pay / Boxer in-store kiosk distribution, and the structural alignment with the Tyme Group multi-market operator. Pick Discovery Bank for the integrated Vitality Money rewards stack, the multi-currency surface, and the credit-card product family — the right pick if you actively use Vitality and want a tier-based premium offering. Pick Bank Zero for the cleanest fee-free transactional account in the South African market, the depositor-aligned mutual-ownership governance, and the disciplined product narrowness — the right pick if you want a primary account with no upsell and you are willing to keep credit, investing, and FX with another provider. African Bank's MyWORLD account family is the credible CODI-covered commercial-bank alternative for savings-rate-led comparison shopping. The rational pattern for a South African retail depositor with balances above ZAR 100,000 is to split across two CODI-member institutions to layer cover; the per-institution ceiling refreshes per bank, regardless of which licence class the receiving institution sits in.