The long answer
Thank you for your email asking how to apply for a Breaking New Ground (BNG) house and if you can apply online.
You can’t apply online. You will need to go to your nearest municipal offices to apply. The same criteria apply to BNG houses as to RDP houses, and I will copy and paste what you need to do from a Groundup article on housing:
“To qualify for an RDP house you must meet the National Housing Subsidy Scheme criteria. This means you must be:
A South African citizen
Over 21 and mentally competent to sign a contract
Married or living with a partner, or single and have dependants (single military veterans or aged people without dependents also qualify)
Earn less than R3,500 per month per household (so if two people in your family earn and these earnings amount to more than R3,500 per month you will not qualify)
A first time government subsidy recipient
A first time home owner
If you are disabled you are supposed to be given preference and your house is supposed to be adapted to meet your needs.
To apply for a government Subsidy house take the following documents to a provincial office of the DHS, or your municipal offices:
Applicant and spouse’s identity documents (green book or ID card)
Certified copies of birth certificates of children
Proof of income if working, e.g. salary slip
You will be asked to fill in a housing subsidy application form. Depending on your province or municipality, you will then be registered on the National Housing Needs Register or your Municipal Housing Demands Database. This is a “waiting list”. Once the project is finalized and the houses built, you will be given keys and a title deed to your home, but it can take many years.
It is illegal to sell an RDP house before you’ve lived in it for eight years. It is illegal to rent out an RDP house.
To check how far you are on the waiting list for a house call 0800 146 873 or go to your municipality’s website.
Note: There is a common misconception that individual ward councillors are involved with the allocation process. They are not! Ward councillors can tell you where to go and who to speak to so that you can register on the housing database, but a ward councillor is not involved in the allocation of houses and you shouldn’t pay a ward councillor to take up your case.”
Wishing you all the best.
Answered on Nov. 18, 2019, 4:28 p.m.
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Please note. We are not lawyers or financial advisors. We do our best to make the answers accurate, but we cannot accept any legal liability if there are errors.