
Johannesburg | 18 May 2026 — As the world marks IDAHOBIT — the International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia, Interphobia and Transphobia this week — the SA LGBT+ Management Forum has released the 2026 South African Workplace Equality Index (SAWEI) National Report.
Africa’s only independently assessed LGBT+ inclusion benchmark documented that while some South African organisations have embraced visible LGBT+ inclusion policies, the everyday lived experience of LGBT+ people remains inconsistent.
Five years after the last SAWEI, the 2026 edition found that employers have made progress in areas such as anti-discrimination protections, Pride visibility, inclusive recruitment messaging and chosen-name systems. However, the report highlights persistent gaps in operational accountability, employee support and customer-facing systems.
“South Africa continues to present a profound contradiction,” said Forum spokesperson Teveshan Kuni-Erasmus. “We have some of the world’s strongest constitutional protections for LGBT+ people, yet many still experience exclusion, misgendering, unequal benefits, inadequate support services and inconsistent treatment across workplaces and institutions.”
The 2026 SAWEI framework marks a major evolution from previous cycles, assessing organisations across 110 independently validated indicators covering leadership, governance, recruitment, workplace culture, employee wellbeing, privacy systems, supplier diversity, customer experience and public visibility.
The result is no longer simply a workplace scorecard. It is a powerful systems-level assessment of how inclusion is experienced across the environments LGBT+ people interact with.
Among the report’s consequential findings was that organisations often cannot confirm whether their Employee Assistance Programme (EAP) providers were adequately equipped to support LGBT+ employees facing discrimination, family rejection, mental health challenges or identity-related stress.
The report also found that some organisations still treat LGBT+ inclusion as a seasonal or reputational exercise rather than embedding it into measurable leadership accountability and operational systems.
“The presence of policies alone does not equal inclusion,” said Kuni-Erasmus. “The real question is whether the systems people interact with every day actually work for LGBT+ individuals consistently, safely and with dignity — not only during Pride season, but throughout the year.”
Only seven organisations completed validated submissions in the 2026 cycle, reflecting the framework’s far more rigorous assessment process compared to previous editions. “We see this not as declining relevance, but as evidence of a more demanding framework for organisations to complete,” explained Kuni-Erasmus.
Publicly recognised participants in 2026 included McKinsey & Company South Africa, Vodacom South Africa, PwC South Africa and Absa Group.
“Importantly, the report’s tone is developmental rather than punitive – it’s about how we can do better,” said Kuni-Erasmus. “Participating organisations are recognised for submitting themselves to independent scrutiny and contributing to a national benchmark designed to support improvement over time.”
The SA LGBT+ Management Forum said the report establishes a critical baseline for a five-year inclusion journey leading to 2030 and called on both the private and public sectors to strengthen implementation beyond policy commitments.
Read the full SAWEI 2026 National Report here: https://lgbtforum.org/uploads/resources/sawei-national-report-2026.pdf
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