South Africa’s groundwater isn’t infinite—and the Department of Water and Sanitation (DWS) is tightening the rules to prove it. Recent updates to the National Water Act mean unregistered boreholes now face penalties, while licensed users gain long-term security. WellEx Drilling has guided hundreds of clients through compliance. Here’s what every property owner must know in 2025.

Key Changes You Can’t Ignore

 
Requirement Who It Affects Deadline
Borehole Registration All users Within 12 months of drilling
Water Use Licence >20,000 L/day (farms, factories) Before extraction begins
Metering & Reporting Licensed users Annual submission
EIA Screening Eco-sensitive zones (wetlands, dolomitic areas) Pre-drilling
 

Step 1: Register Your Borehole (Even If It’s Old)

Step 2: Know When You Need a Licence

Pro tip: WellEx’s in-house hydrogeologists compile the technical report—approved 98% first-time.

Step 3: Install a Compliant Meter

Step 4: Avoid Red-Flag Zones

WellEx conducts pre-compliance site scans to flag risks before you drill.

Real Story: The Mthembu Estate, KZN Midlands

“We expanded irrigation without realising we’d crossed 25,000 L/day. DWS issued a cease order. WellEx retro-fitted a meter, submitted the licence, and had us legal in 6 weeks—no downtime.” — Sipho Mthembu, 2025

One Call Keeps You Legal

Non-compliance isn’t a slap on the wrist—it’s a shutdown. WellEx Drilling handles registration, licensing, and reporting from day one.

Stay ahead of the law. Book a free compliance review and drill with confidence.

WellEx Drilling – Compliant. Sustainable. Nationwide.

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