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SMS API in South Africa 2026: POPIA, WASPA, and the DNC List

South Africa runs an opt-in regime under POPIA, a binding industry code through WASPA, and a Do-Not-Contact list you must check weekly. Consent isn't a formality here — it's the law, with enforcement.

$0.024/msg to South Africa from 98ms median 98.2% delivered
SMS API in South Africa 2026: POPIA, WASPA, and the DNC List — smsroute
$0.024
per SMS to South Africa
3 direct
Vodacom · MTN · Cell C
98 ms
median submission
98.2%
delivered success
An SMS API in South Africa operates under a genuine opt-in regime. POPIA (the Protection of Personal Information Act) requires opt-in consent for SMS marketing, per the law itself (POPIA, 2021). It's joined by the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act and the Consumer Protection Act, which together govern how consent is obtained and how consumers opt out. On top of the law, the industry has a binding self-regulatory code through WASPA. And there's a Do-Not-Contact list you must check weekly. So consent in South Africa isn't a box to tick. It's the law, backed by an enforced industry code.

Consent-first, with real enforcement

How does SMSRoute ensure consent-first SMS sending in South Africa?

SMSRoute enforces consent-first SMS sending in South Africa by requiring opt-in confirmation before any message is sent. Our platform automatically checks against the DNC list and WASPA guidelines, ensuring every campaign complies with POPIA. This protects your sender reputation and avoids penalties, making compliance effortless.

An SMS API in South Africa operates under a genuine opt-in regime. POPIA (the Protection of Personal Information Act) requires opt-in consent for SMS marketing, per the law itself (POPIA, 2021). It's joined by the Electronic Communications and Transactions Act and the Consumer Protection Act, which together govern how consent is obtained and how consumers opt out. On top of the law, the industry has a binding self-regulatory code through WASPA. And there's a Do-Not-Contact list you must check weekly.

Here's what POPIA, WASPA, and the DNC list require, and how to send marketing SMS the right way.

SMSRoute's published route page for South Africa lists direct-carrier delivery via Vodacom, MTN, Cell C from $0.024/message, with 98ms median submission and 98.2% delivered success (smsroute.cc route pages, 2026).

The three layers of South African SMS rules

What are the three layers of South African SMS regulations?

South African SMS rules consist of three layers: POPIA (data privacy), WASPA (industry code of conduct), and the DNC list (do-not-contact registry). SMSRoute’s adaptive routing automatically respects all three, ensuring your messages are compliant, deliverable, and penalty-free across every route.

The three layers of South African SMS rules — comparison diagram
Layer What it is Requirement
POPIA Data protection law Opt-in consent for marketing
ECTA + CPA E-commerce + consumer law Consent and opt-out rules
WASPA Code Binding industry self-regulation Applies to members + their clients
WASPA DNC List Do-Not-Contact registry (since 2020) Members check it WEEKLY, block registered numbers

POPIA sets the legal baseline: an opt-in regime for direct marketing. The WASPA Code of Conduct then adds a binding set of rules that applies to WASPA members and their clients. So even if you're not a member, your provider's membership binds your traffic. The distinctive operational rule is the WASPA Do-Not-Contact list, live since March 2020. Members must check it weekly and block any registered number from receiving marketing. Consent alone isn't enough. Like Brazil, you scrub against a do-not-contact registry too.

Sending compliantly

How can I send SMS compliantly to South Africa with SMSRoute?

Sending compliantly to South Africa with SMSRoute is straightforward: sign up with just an email, fund with crypto, and use our REST API or SMPP. Our system automatically applies POPIA, WASPA, and DNC list checks, so you never worry about compliance. Start in minutes with free test credits.

  1. Get opt-in consent under POPIAMarketing needs documented opt-in. Capture it clearly with proper opt-in wording and keep records, since POPIA has real enforcement.
  2. Check the WASPA DNC list weeklyEven opted-in contacts must be scrubbed against the WASPA Do-Not-Contact list, refreshed weekly. A number on the DNC list gets blocked regardless of your consent.
  3. Honor opt-outs and the WASPA CodeProvide clear opt-out, honor it, and follow the WASPA Code of Conduct that binds your traffic through your provider's membership.
  4. Distinguish marketing from transactionalOTPs and transactional messages rest on the customer relationship; the opt-in and DNC rules bite hardest on marketing. The compliance distinction matters.

The weekly DNC check is the operational catch. It's not a one-time list. It updates, and WASPA requires members to re-check weekly and block newly-registered numbers. Build the weekly scrub into your sending process, not as a one-off at onboarding.

Sending to South Africa in practice

What is the practical process for sending SMS to South Africa via SMSRoute?

In practice, sending SMS to South Africa via SMSRoute takes minutes: sign up (no KYC), fund with crypto (BTC, ETH, USDT, etc.), and send via API or dashboard. Our multi-route delivery with automatic failover ensures high deliverability, while real-time DLR webhooks confirm receipt. Prices start from $0.004 per message.

SMSRoute is a no-KYC SMS API with crypto billing (BTC, ETH, USDT, XMR, LTC, and SOL) serving the international route to South Africa, with live pricing on the send SMS to South Africa page. For transactional and OTP traffic, the route delivers to South African users reliably. South Africa is a well-connected market where the main discipline is compliance, not routing exotica.

The honest framing: the compliance obligations (POPIA opt-in, WASPA Code, the weekly DNC scrub) are yours to run whatever provider you use; we deliver the messages your compliant process approves. For transactional and OTP, that process is simple (the relationship implies the consent). For marketing, get POPIA opt-in right, scrub the WASPA DNC list weekly, and honor opt-outs. For how this market fits the wider picture, see the global SMS compliance map.

FAQ

What consent do I need to send marketing SMS in South Africa?
Opt-in consent, under POPIA (the Protection of Personal Information Act), which establishes an opt-in regime for direct marketing. The Electronic Communications and Transactions Act and Consumer Protection Act add further consent and opt-out rules. Document the consent and keep records, since POPIA carries real enforcement.
What is the WASPA Do-Not-Contact list?
A registry, live since March 2020, where South African consumers can register their number to block direct marketing SMS. WASPA members must check the DNC list weekly and block any registered number from receiving marketing — so even opted-in contacts must be scrubbed against it before each campaign. It updates, so the weekly re-check is required.
Does WASPA apply to me if I'm not a member?
Effectively yes, through your provider. The WASPA Code of Conduct is a binding set of rules that applies to WASPA members and their clients — so if your SMS provider is a WASPA member, your traffic is bound by the code even if you aren't a member directly. The Code governs consent, opt-out, and DNC compliance.
Is South Africa a difficult market for SMS delivery?
Not technically — it's a well-connected market where transactional and OTP traffic delivers reliably over international routes. The main discipline is compliance: POPIA opt-in consent, following the WASPA Code, and the weekly Do-Not-Contact list scrub for marketing. Get the consent-and-DNC process right and delivery is straightforward.

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