Table of Contents
What Is a SETA Learnership?
A SETA (Sector Education and Training Authority) Learnership is a work-based learning programme in South Africa combining classroom training with on-the-job experience. The employer pays your salary while you earn qualifications recognized by the SAQA (South African Qualifications Authority).
Most learnerships run 12–24 months and lead to qualifications from NQF Level 2 to Level 4.
Am I Eligible to Apply for SETA Learnerships 2026?
You must meet all three criteria:
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Age | 18–35 years old (some SETAs accept up to 40 years) |
| Education | Grade 10 (matric exemption) minimum; some specialised roles require Grade 12 |
| Employment status | Currently unemployed or NOT in full-time employment |
Related programmes: If you don’t qualify for a SETA Learnerships, explore SETA skills programmes or unemployed youth grants instead.
When do SETA Learnership 2026 Applications Open?
Most SETA learnerships open applications in Q2–Q3 2026 (May–August). However, application windows vary significantly by SETA.
| SETA | Sector | Expected Opening | Typical Deadline |
|---|---|---|---|
| MICT SETA | ICT, media, telecommunications | July 2026 | September 2026 |
| Energy SETA | Energy, utilities | June 2026 | August 2026 |
| INSETA | Insurance, financial services | August 2026 | October 2026 |
| MERSETA | Manufacturing, engineering | May 2026 | July 2026 |
| SAICA | Accounting, audit | June 2026 | August 2026 |
Action: Visit your chosen SETA’s official website directly to confirm exact dates — they change annually.
How to Apply for SETA Learnerships 2026 Online: 7 Steps
Step 1: Identify Which SETA Offers Your Preferred Qualification
SETAs are divided by sector. Your career interest determines which one to approach.
Example: If you want an IT learnership, apply to MICT SETA, not INSETA (financial services).
Find your SETA:
- Visit the official SETA website for your sector (e.g., www.mict.org.za)
- Look for the “Learnerships” or “Apply Now” tab
- Download the list of participating employers in your province
Step 2: Gather Required Documents
Have these ready before starting your online application:
- Valid ID copy (South African ID book, passport, or smart ID card)
- Grade 10 certificate (or Grade 12 matric certificate)
- CV or résumé (one page, maximum 2 pages)
- Proof of unemployment (UIF letter, letter from municipality, or statutory declaration)
- Proof of address (utility bill, lease agreement, or bank statement — dated within 3 months)
- Contact details (working email address, valid cellphone number)
Pro tip: Scan documents in PDF format (not photos). Max file size is usually 5 MB per document.
Step 3: Create Your Online Account on the SETA Portal
Most SETAs now use dedicated online portals. Here’s the general process:
- Go to your SETA’s official website
- Click “Register” or “Create Account”
- Enter your email address and create a strong password (mix uppercase, numbers, symbols)
- Verify your email by clicking the confirmation link sent to your inbox
- Log in with your credentials
Common SETA application portals:
- MICT SETA: https://learner.mict.org.za
- Energy SETA: https://applications.energy.org.za
- INSETA: https://apply.inseta.org.za
If the portal isn’t working, contact the SETA’s helpline (numbers listed on their official site) or email learnership@[seta].org.za.
Step 4: Complete the Online Application Form
The form typically has 4–5 sections:
Section A — Personal Information
- Full name (as it appears on your ID)
- ID number
- Date of birth
- Province of residence
- Contact email and phone
Section B — Educational Background
- School attended
- Year of graduation
- Grade 10/12 results
Section C — Employment Status & Preferences
- Current employment status (select “Unemployed”)
- Preferred SETA qualification
- Top 3 preferred industries
- Provinces where you’re willing to work
Section D — Document Upload
- Upload ID copy, qualifications, CV, proof of address
Section E — Declaration
- Agree to the terms and conditions
- Confirm all information is truthful
Filling tips:
- Don’t rush. Incomplete forms are auto-rejected.
- Use your legal name exactly as it appears on your ID.
- If fields are marked “optional,” leave them blank — don’t add placeholder text.
- Save progress frequently (most portals auto-save, but verify).
Step 5: Review Before Submitting
Before hitting submit:
- All fields are completed and accurately filled
- Document file sizes are under 5 MB
- Your email address is spelled correctly (confirmation will be sent there)
- Your phone number is active and can receive SMS
- You’ve read and ticked the terms and conditions
- The declaration box is checked
Step 6: Submit and Receive Confirmation
- Click “Submit Application”
- The portal will show a confirmation message with your application reference number (e.g., APP-2026-45782)
- Screenshot or copy this number — you’ll need it for all future correspondence
- Check your email inbox (and spam folder) for a confirmation email within 24 hours
If you don’t receive confirmation within 24 hours: Log back in and check your application status on the portal. If it still shows “Pending,” contact the SETA support team.
Step 7: Track Your Application Status
Most SETAs provide a tracking dashboard. To check status:
- Log in to the SETA portal
- Go to “My Applications” or “Application Status”
- Find your application using your reference number
- Status updates typically follow this sequence:
- Submitted → Under Review → Shortlisted or Not Selected → Employer Interview → Offer Letter
This process takes 4–12 weeks depending on the SETA.
What Happens After You Submit?
Timeline: From Submission to Employment
| Stage | Timeframe | What to Expect |
|---|---|---|
| Application review | 2–4 weeks | SETA filters applications for completeness and eligibility |
| Shortlisting | 1–2 weeks | You’re notified by email if you’ve made the shortlist |
| Employer interviews | 3–4 weeks | The employer contacts you directly to arrange interviews |
| Conditional offer | 1–2 weeks | If selected, you receive a conditional offer letter |
| Medical & background checks | 2–4 weeks | Standard checks before final confirmation |
| Onboarding | 1–2 weeks | Final paperwork, start date confirmation |
| Learnership begins | — | You start work and training |
Total time: 12–24 weeks from submission to first day on the job.
Do I Need to Apply to Multiple SETAs?
No. Apply to one SETA per sector, not multiple SETAs simultaneously. However, you can apply to different sectors in parallel. Example:
- ✅ Apply to MICT SETA for an IT learnership AND Energy SETA for a solar technician learnership (same deadline)
- ❌ Apply to MICT SETA twice with different qualifications (duplicate applications get flagged)
Common SETA Learnership 2026 Application Problems & Fixes
Problem: “Email confirmation not received”
Solutions:
- Check your spam folder (add noreply@seta.org.za to your contacts)
- Wait 24 hours; some SETAs batch confirmations
- Log in to the portal directly; confirmation isn’t always emailed
- Contact SETA support to resend the link
Problem: “Portal says my documents are invalid.”
Reasons & fixes:
- File format: Upload PDF only (not JPEG or Word)
- File too large: Compress the PDF (use smallpdf.com or ilovepdf.com)
- Document expired: Proof of address must be dated within 3 months
- Low resolution: Rescan at 200 DPI minimum for clarity
Problem: “I can’t create an account — email already registered.”
Solutions:
- Click “Forgot Password” to recover your existing account
- If you forgot your email, contact the SETA to verify your identity
- Use a different email if you have multiple accounts to manage (not recommended)
Problem: “Application submitted but status still shows ‘Incomplete'”
Likely causes:
- A required field wasn’t fully filled (even if the portal didn’t flag it)
- Documents failed to upload silently; try uploading again
- The portal has a glitch; wait 24 hours and refresh
Action: Take a screenshot of your confirmation number and email SETA’s support team to ask them to verify that your submission was received.
How to Stand Out: Application Tips from Hiring Managers
1. Write a One-Page CV That Matches the Role
Your CV should show:
- Relevant skills: List technical or soft skills the learnership emphasizes
- Volunteer or school experience: Even unpaid work counts (e.g., community projects, school committees)
- Languages: If the role serves diverse communities, mention language proficiencies
Format: Use a simple template (Arial, 11pt, one page max). No colours, no graphics — it scans better in automated systems.
2. Address the “Why This Learnership?” Question
Most applications ask, “Why are you applying?” Avoid generic answers like “I want a good job.”
Instead, write something like:
“I’m applying for the IT Support learnership because I troubleshot computers for my school’s IT lab, helped 50+ students with software issues, and want to formalise this passion into a career. I’m committed to the 18-month programme and ready to relocate if needed.”
This shows direction, experience, and commitment — exactly what employers want.
3. Double-Check Spelling and Grammar
Typos in online applications get flagged by both automated systems and human reviewers. Use Grammarly or read your application aloud before submitting.
4. Be Honest About Your Availability
If the learnership requires relocation or shift work, confirm you’re genuinely flexible. Employers can tell if you’re applying casually, and they deprioritize uncertain candidates.
SETA Learnerships vs. Other Training Pathways
| Pathway | Duration | Pay | Qualification | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| SETA Learnership | 12–24 months | Employer salary (~R4,000–R8,000/month) | NQF L2–L4 certificate | Work-integrated learning |
| TVET College | 3 years | No salary; tuition-free | National Diploma | Full-time students |
| SETA Skills Programme | 3–6 months | Stipend (~R1,500/month) | Unaccredited | Quick skills boost |
| Unemployed Youth Grant | 12 months | Government grant (~R2,500/month) | No formal qualification | Income while studying |
FAQs: SETA Learnerships 2026
Q: Can I apply for a SETA learnership if I’m currently working? A: No. Most SETAs require proof of unemployment. If you’re in part-time or contract work, check your specific SETA’s criteria — some allow it if you earn below a threshold.
Q: What if my qualifications are from another country? A: You’ll need an SAQA equivalency assessment. Apply at www.saqa.org.za (costs ~R500–R1,000). This takes 4–8 weeks, so start early.
Q: Do I pay fees to apply for a SETA learnership? A: No. Applications are free. Beware of “SETA recruitment” websites charging fees — they’re scams.
Q: Can I change my application after submitting it? A: Most SETAs don’t allow edits once submitted. If you spot an error, contact support within 24 hours to see if they can accept a re-submission.
Q: What if I don’t get selected? A: SETAs keep applications on file for 12 months. You can reapply in the next cycle without resubmitting everything. Ask the SETA if feedback is available — it helps you improve next time.
Q: Is a learnership a job or a training course? A: Both. The company employs you and you attend training in parallel. The employer pays your salary. You must balance work and study for 12–24 months.
Official SETA Links & Support Contacts
SETAs by Sector (2026):
- MICT SETA (ICT): www.mict.org.za | 011 544 0700
- Energy SETA: www.energy.org.za | 012 348 2600
- INSETA (Insurance): www.inseta.org.za | 010 590 1000
- MERSETA (Manufacturing): www.merseta.org.za | 011 628 3666
- SAICA (Accounting): www.saica.co.za | 011 621 6600
- AgriSETA (Agriculture): www.agriseta.co.za | 012 840 2300
- SERVICES SETA (Public services): www.serviceseta.org.za | 012 316 4500
National Resources:
- SETA Finder: www.dhet.gov.za/setas
- Learner Registration System: www.nlrd.gov.za
- SAQA (Qualification verification): www.saqa.org.za
Key Takeaways
- Check your SETA’s exact application dates — they vary by sector and province
- Gather documents before starting — incomplete applications are rejected
- Create a strong one-page CV that shows relevant experience or skills
- Track your application using the reference number; expect 4–12 weeks for decisions
- Be flexible about location and schedule — employers notice genuinely committed candidates
Meeta Seta is a skills development and labour market content contributor for the Safety and Security Sector Education and Training Authority (SAS SETA). The author focuses on providing accurate, up-to-date information on learnerships, skills programmes, occupational qualifications, and workforce development initiatives within South Africa’s safety and security sector.
With a strong emphasis on policy-aligned, learner-focused communication, Meeta Seta contributes content that supports informed participation in SETA-funded programmes and promotes access to verified training and employment pathways. All published material prioritises clarity, compliance with national skills development frameworks, and alignment with official SAS SETA objectives.
Through saseta.co.za, Meeta Seta aims to support learners, employers, and training providers with reliable information that strengthens skills development and economic participation.
