Paid Today, Broke by the Weekend - The Salary Cycle Keeping South Africans Stuck
Written by: Omega Ngema Save to Instapaper
Paid Today, Broke by the Weekend: The Salary Cycle Keeping South Africans Stuck
Why salaries vanish within days, how debt fills the gap, and expert advice from Sebastien Alexanderson on breaking South Africa’s payday cycle.
25 March 2026: More than 60% of South Africans run out of money before month-end, many within the first week. Payday, for millions, is no longer about getting ahead. It is about catching up.
This is according to Sebastien Alexanderson, Head of National Debt Advisors, who said there is a brief moment when the salary lands, where everything feels manageable. But that feeling fades quickly.
“What people experience on payday is not financial stability. It is temporary relief,” says Alexanderson. “That money is already allocated before it even arrives. You are not getting ahead, you are catching up.”
He said once essentials are paid, very little remains, leaving many under pressure within days.
The First Five Days After Payday
After covering basics, small, justified expenses creep in.
“We call it relief spending. You have spent the entire month stressed about money. When you finally have some, you want to feel normal again,” Alexanderson explains.
But timing matters most.
“That first five days after payday determine how the rest of the month will feel.”
When Credit Becomes The Safety Net
As money runs out, credit fills the gap.
“Credit has become the bridge between people’s income and their reality. The problem is that it is a very expensive bridge,” he says.
This often leads to a cycle of borrowing just to stay afloat, with each new month starting further behind.
Practical Steps To Break The Cycle
To break the cycle, Alexanderson recommends a practical approach:
Track every rand for a full month to understand spending habitsControl spending in the first five days after paydayPrioritise essentials before any discretionary spendingReduce reliance on high-interest, short-term creditConsolidate debt or move to lower-interest options where possibleBuild a small emergency buffer, even graduallySeek professional help early if debt becomes unmanageable
“This is not a personal failure. It is a cycle that people have been pulled into,” Alexanderson says.
“But with the right steps and support, it can be broken.”
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