Atlas Finance — NCR-registered, R500–R20,000, has branches across Johannesburg specifically, works with limited/poor credit history
Southern Finance — NCR-registered, max APR capped at 30%, R500–R8,000, online + branch application
EC Online Loans / Dot Loans / iLoans / Ayoba Loans — brokers/direct lenders that specifically advertise for blacklisted applicants and connect you to a panel of NCR-registered lenders
Typical requirements you’ll be asked for:
– Valid South African ID
– Proof of income (payslips or bank statements) — usually R2,500–R3,000/month minimum
– Active bank account, 3+ months old, with debit order capability
– Not currently under debt review, administration, or sequestration (this disqualifies you regardless of lender)
What to realistically expect: smaller amounts (R500–R8,000 is typical for a first blacklisted loan), shorter terms (1–6 months), and higher interest — commonly quoted around 50–60% effective annual rate, which is the maximum the NCR permits for this risk category.
Before you apply, three checks worth doing:
Verify NCR registration at ncr.org.za or by calling 0860 627 627 — this takes two minutes and rules out the illegal lenders that specifically target blacklisted searches
Never pay an upfront fee to “release” or “process” a loan — this is the single most common scam pattern in this space
Watch for lenders operating only via WhatsApp/Facebook with no physical address or NCR number — a real red flag
One thing worth strongly considering first: if the reason you’re blacklisted is that you can’t currently manage existing debt, taking on another loan — even a legitimate one — often makes things worse rather than better. Free, NCR-regulated debt counselling (via a registered debt counsellor, findable through ncr.org.za) can legally restructure what you already owe, sometimes cutting monthly payments by up to half, without adding new debt.