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Last updated: 16 July 2026
Understanding how to e‑file court documents in South Africa is now essential for every litigator, in‑house counsel and self‑represented party involved in Superior Court proceedings. The Office of the Chief Justice has progressively rolled out Court Online, the judiciary’s electronic filing and case‑management platform, across High Court divisions since the initial Gauteng pilot launched under Directive 1 of 2022. As of 2026, electronic filing is either mandatory or strongly encouraged in most High Court divisions, replacing the traditional paper‑based counter filing that defined South African litigation for decades.
This guide walks through the full court e‑filing procedure, from registration and document preparation to service, deadlines and common rejection pitfalls, so that you can file with confidence and avoid costly procedural missteps.
Court Online is the electronic filing platform developed by the South African Judiciary to modernise case initiation, document filing and judicial case management in the Superior Courts. It operates under the authority of the Office of the Chief Justice and is accessible through the judiciary’s official website. The platform covers the filing of originating processes (summons and applications), subsequent pleadings, interlocutory applications, practice notes and electronic trial bundles.
The system applies primarily to the High Court of South Africa and its various provincial divisions. The initial pilot, announced in Directive 1 of 2022 issued by the Law Society of South Africa (LSSA), focused on the Gauteng Division (Pretoria and Johannesburg). Since then, rollouts have expanded to additional divisions, with the judiciary investing in infrastructure and training through partnerships with the State Information Technology Agency (SITA) and the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development.
Registered legal practitioners, attorneys and advocates with current enrolment on the roll of the Legal Practice Council, are the primary users of Court Online. Litigants in person may also access the system in certain divisions, subject to the registration and verification requirements discussed below.
Before you can e‑file court documents in South Africa through Court Online, you must satisfy specific eligibility criteria and prepare the necessary infrastructure.
As of 2026, several High Court divisions treat Court Online as the default or mandatory filing channel for new civil matters. The Gauteng Division (both Pretoria and Johannesburg seats) was the first to adopt mandatory e‑filing for certain matter categories following Directive 1 of 2022. Industry observers expect the remaining divisions to follow a similar trajectory as infrastructure and training programmes expand. Practitioners should check the judiciary’s Court Online division list before initiating proceedings to confirm whether electronic filing is compulsory, optional or unavailable in their target court.
The court e‑filing procedure follows a logical sequence: register, prepare, upload, pay and confirm service. Below is the process broken into five numbered steps, followed by a consolidated timeline table.
Practice tip: Register well before you need to file. Last‑minute registration attempts risk missing a filing deadline if verification is delayed.
Document preparation is where most e‑filing rejections originate. Court Online imposes specific formatting standards to ensure documents are legible, searchable and archivable.
Practice tip: Run a pre‑flight check on every PDF before uploading. Confirm it opens correctly, bookmarks function, page numbering is sequential and the file is in PDF/A format.
The upload workflow differs slightly depending on whether you are commencing action proceedings (summons route) or application proceedings (motion route).
For action proceedings (summons):
For application proceedings (motion):
After submission, the court registrar validates the filing. If the documents comply with formatting and procedural requirements, the case is formally enrolled and a confirmed case number is assigned. If the registrar identifies deficiencies, the filing is rejected with a notification specifying the reason, at which point you must remedy the defect and resubmit.
A critical distinction in the e‑filing process is that electronic filing does not constitute service. Uploading documents to Court Online satisfies the filing obligation with the court, but the service obligation on opposing parties must still be discharged separately in accordance with the Uniform Rules of Court.
If your filing is rejected, the timestamp of the original submission is generally not preserved. You must correct the deficiency and resubmit, and the new submission timestamp applies. This makes pre‑upload quality checks essential.
Once a case is enrolled, Court Online (integrated with or supplemented by the CaseLines evidence‑management platform in many divisions) allows parties to upload trial bundles, heads of argument, practice notes and supplementary affidavits throughout the life of the matter. Each document must meet the same PDF/A, bookmarking and indexing standards. Comply with any court directions or practice notes regarding bundle structure, pagination and filing deadlines for trial‑readiness documents.
| Step | Who Does It | Typical Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Register for Court Online and complete verification | Applicant / law firm administrator | 1–10 business days |
| Prepare and convert all documents to PDF/A | Filing party / legal assistant | Same day – 2 business days (depends on bundle size) |
| Create case record and submit originating papers | Filing attorney or litigant in person | Minutes – hours (timestamp on successful submission) |
| Court validation and fee processing | Court Online / Registrar | Minutes – up to 2 business days |
| Service of process on opposing party | Sheriff / process server | 3–14 days (varies by location; urgent: same day if registrar approves) |
| Registrar docketing and case allocation | Court Registrar | 1–5 business days after successful filing |
The documents needed to start a civil case through Court Online depend on whether you are instituting action proceedings or application proceedings. The table below consolidates the core requirements for both routes. All documents must conform to the electronic filing requirements described above.
| Document | Notes |
|---|---|
| Combined Summons / Simple Summons (action proceedings) | PDF/A format. Drafted by plaintiff or attorney. Must include the defendant’s address for service and the particulars of claim (combined or as a separate attachment). |
| Particulars of Claim (if filed separately from the summons) | Numbered paragraphs. All annexures indexed, labelled and bookmarked within the PDF. |
| Notice of Motion + Founding Affidavit (application proceedings) | Affidavit must be in sworn format, with the deponent’s details and a commissioner of oaths’ stamp. Annexures labelled and indexed. |
| Power of Attorney / Authority to Act | Signed and dated by the client. Scanned certified copy acceptable unless the court specifically requires the original. |
| Court Online Case Initiation Form / Cover Sheet | Generated within Court Online. Complete all mandatory meta‑data fields (party names, matter type, division). |
| Identity Documents / Company Registration Documents | Copy of ID or passport for individuals; CIPC registration documents for juristic entities. Certified where required by the registrar. |
| Filing Fee Payment Confirmation | Receipt generated by Court Online or proof of electronic funds transfer if offline payment is permitted. |
| Authority to Litigate (litigants in person) | Signed declaration confirming the litigant is acting without legal representation. Must include contact details and address for service. |
| Electronic Bundle of Authorities / Evidence | Indexed, bookmarked PDF. Must comply with Court Online size and format specifications. |
Practitioners should prepare all documents before initiating the case on Court Online. Incomplete uploads or missing annexures are a leading cause of registrar rejections and force refiling, which resets the filing timestamp.
Once an originating process has been e‑filed and served, strict time limits govern the exchange of pleadings. These deadlines are prescribed by the Uniform Rules of Court, published under the authority of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 and the Department of Justice and Constitutional Development. The table below summarises the principal deadlines for the most common procedural steps.
| Action | Trigger (When Clock Starts) | Typical Deadline |
|---|---|---|
| Deliver notice of intention to defend | Service of summons on defendant | 10 court days |
| Deliver plea (or exception / special plea) | Delivery of notice of intention to defend | 20 court days |
| Deliver notice of intention to oppose (application) | Service of notice of motion and founding affidavit | Typically within the time stipulated in the notice of motion (commonly 10–15 days) |
| Deliver answering affidavit | Filing of notice of intention to oppose | As directed or agreed, commonly 15 court days |
| Deliver replying affidavit | Service of answering affidavit | As directed or agreed, commonly 10 court days |
| Compile and file trial bundle | Close of pleadings / pre‑trial conference directions | As directed by the managing judge or practice note |
Court days vs calendar days. The Uniform Rules distinguish between “court days” and “calendar days”. Court days exclude Saturdays, Sundays and public holidays. When calculating a deadline expressed in court days, start counting from the day after the trigger event and exclude non‑court days. Always verify the applicable rule for the specific pleading step, certain rules and court practice notes may prescribe calendar days instead.
Filing fees for the High Court are prescribed by regulation and published in the Government Gazette by the Government Printing Works. Fees are payable electronically through Court Online at the time of submission. The table below provides the principal fee categories. Exact amounts are updated periodically by regulation, confirm the current tariff on the judiciary’s website or in the latest Government Gazette before filing.
| Item | Notes |
|---|---|
| High Court filing fee (originating process, summons) | Prescribed by Government Gazette tariff schedule. Payable on submission via Court Online. Confirm the current amount with the relevant division’s registrar or the latest Gazette notice. |
| Application fee (motion proceedings) | May differ from the summons filing fee. Some applications attract variable fees depending on the relief sought or claim value. Verify against the current tariff. |
| Sheriff service fee | Payable directly to the sheriff. Tariffs vary by distance travelled, number of attempts and volume of documents served. The sheriff’s tariff is separately regulated. |
| Electronic bundle / CaseLines platform charges | Where a third‑party platform (such as CaseLines) is used for evidence management, subscription or per‑bundle fees may apply. These are vendor costs, not court fees. |
| Copying, scanning and certification | Variable depending on the service provider. Budget for certification of identity documents, company records and affidavits where required. |
Practitioners are advised to budget for court filing fees South Africa well in advance of the filing date. Failed or delayed payments are a common cause of submission rejection on Court Online and can result in a missed deadline.
The trajectory of e‑filing South Africa has accelerated considerably since the 2022 pilot. Several developments in 2025–2026 are reshaping how practitioners interact with the courts.
Troubleshooting a rejection: If the registrar rejects your filing, review the rejection notification carefully. It will specify the deficiency (format, missing document, fee issue). Correct the identified defect, re‑convert to PDF/A if necessary and resubmit through Court Online. The resubmission receives a new timestamp, there is no automatic backdating to the original attempt.
On the question of whether court documents are public record in South Africa: as a general principle, documents filed in open court proceedings are part of the public record unless a court order restricts access. However, electronic access to filed documents via Court Online is subject to the platform’s access controls and the policies of the relevant division. Consult the judiciary’s official guidance for the specific rules governing public access to e‑filed records.
Knowing how to e‑file court documents in South Africa is no longer a technical convenience, it is a core litigation competency. Court Online has transformed the filing landscape in the High Court, and the 2025–2026 expansion means that practitioners in virtually every division must be proficient with the platform. The process is straightforward when approached methodically: register early, prepare documents to PDF/A standard, follow the correct case‑creation workflow for your matter type, pay filing fees promptly and arrange service separately. Avoiding common pitfalls, wrong file formats, missing signatures, last‑minute submissions, will save time, cost and the risk of a procedural misstep that could prejudice your client’s case.
For related procedural guidance, see our articles on how to enforce a court order in South Africa, conveyancing changes in South Africa for 2026 and the legal process for selling a business in South Africa.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Nicqui Galaktiou at Nicqui Galaktiou Inc Attorneys, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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