Avoid SRD Scams

SRD scams target people who need help with SRD R370 status, payments, appeals, phone-number changes, banking updates, applications, reapplications, cancellations and identity verification. Use this guide to spot unsafe help before you share your ID number, cellphone number, OTP, SMS link, address, banking details or SRD profile information.

Check If SRD Help Is Safe

Before you send details or click a link, check the warning signs. No unofficial person can guarantee approval, release payment or safely fix your SRD profile for a fee.

Never Share OTP, SMS link, banking PIN, app password, card PIN or full banking details.
Big Warning Sign Someone asks for money to approve SRD, release payment, fix appeal or change details.
Safe Response Stop sharing details, check your own status, then use official SASSA routes if needed.

Do not post your ID number, phone number, application address, OTP, bank account number or application details in Facebook comments, WhatsApp groups, Telegram groups or public forums.

Common SRD Scam Warning Signs

💬WhatsApp Approval Help Someone claims they can approve your SRD grant faster if you send personal details.
💸Payment Release Fee Someone asks for money to release a grant payment, unlock a pay date or fix a declined status.
🔐OTP Request Someone asks for your OTP, SMS link, PIN, banking app password or card details.
🌐Fake SRD Status Links Use this if a page copies SASSA wording and asks for ID numbers, phone numbers, OTPs or bank details.
📱Fake Phone Recovery Someone says they can recover your old SRD number if you pay or send your OTP.
🏦Fake Banking Form A link asks for bank details, card details or app passwords outside the official SRD process.

Details You Should Never Share

Never share your OTP or SMS link

Your OTP, PIN or SMS verification link can be used to access or change parts of your SRD profile. Do not give it to anyone in WhatsApp, Facebook, Telegram, SMS or private messages.

Never share banking PINs or app passwords

No safe SRD process should ask for your banking PIN, card PIN, banking app password or full card details. Keep these private at all times.

Do not post personal details publicly

Do not post your ID number, phone number, home address, application ID, bank account number or screenshots with personal details in Facebook comments, WhatsApp groups or public forums.

Do not send documents to strangers

Be careful when someone asks for a photo of your ID, bank statement, proof of address or selfie. Only use official channels when documents or verification are required.

Do not give away SRD profile access

Your phone number, ID number, application ID, OTP and profile details can be used to change contact details, payment details or access your SRD application.

Fake SRD Help to Avoid

Fake approval services

No unofficial person can guarantee SRD approval. If someone promises approval after payment, it is a warning sign.

Fake appeal services

Be careful of people who ask for money to submit appeals, speed up appeal results or change decline reasons. Read the SRD appeal guide and use the correct official route.

Fake banking update forms

Do not enter bank account details on random forms or social media links. If you need to change payment details, start with the update banking details guide.

Fake identity verification help

Be careful of anyone who says they can complete e-KYC, biometric checks or identity verification for you if you send documents, selfies, OTPs or money. Use the SASSA identity verification guide if verification is the issue.

Fake payment date or late-payment posts

Scammers may copy SASSA wording and create fake payment-date posts. Confirm payment timing through the SRD payment dates guide, official channels or your own SRD status result.

What to Do If You Suspect an SRD Scam

1. Stop sharing information

Do not send more details, documents, OTPs, SMS links or banking information. Stop the conversation and do not make payments.

2. Check your SRD status

Check your latest SRD result to see whether your status, phone number or payment method appears unusual. If something looks wrong, use official support routes.

3. Secure your phone and accounts

If you shared an OTP, banking information or account access, secure your mobile number, banking app, email and online accounts as soon as possible.

4. Check contact and banking details

If your SRD profile may have been accessed, check whether the cellphone number, banking details or payment method linked to your SRD application has changed.

5. Contact SASSA if your grant profile was affected

If your SRD phone number, banking details, address or application information was changed without permission, use the SASSA contact details guide to find official help routes.

If Your SRD Phone Number Was Changed Without Permission

Report the unauthorised change

SASSA provides an official SRD route for reporting an unauthorised cellphone number change. Use it only if your SRD phone number was changed without your permission.

Use the official unauthorised-change route

Go to https://srd.sassa.gov.za/sc19/auth if your SRD cellphone number was changed without your permission.

Open official report route

Do not use a stranger’s recovery service

Scammers may claim they can recover your SRD profile if you send money or personal details. Do not use unofficial recovery services.

Fix your number after you regain control

Read the change SRD phone number guide if you need to update the number safely after dealing with the unauthorised change.

How to Check Whether an SRD Page Is Safe

Check the website address

Be careful of pages that use misspelled names, strange domains, shortened links or copied SASSA wording. Do not enter private information unless you are sure the page is legitimate.

Check what the page asks for

A suspicious page may ask for banking passwords, card PINs, OTPs, full card details or payment before helping you.

Check if the promise sounds unrealistic

Promises like guaranteed approval, instant pay date, faster appeal result or payment release after a fee are warning signs.

Check whether it is a comment or private message

Official help should not require you to post private details publicly or send OTPs in private messages to strangers.

Use the right guide before clicking random links

Sensitive actions have different steps. Phone-number changes, banking updates, identity verification, appeals, applications and contact routes should not be handled through random links.

Official Source Notes

SASSA fraud reporting

The SASSA services FAQ says suspected fraudulent or corrupt activities relating to social grants can be reported by phoning SASSA’s grants and fraud hotline.

Official source: SASSA services FAQ

SASSA contact routes

The official SASSA contact page lists the toll-free number, head-office number, grant enquiries email and regional contact details.

Official source: SASSA contact page

Unauthorised cellphone-number change

The official SRD unauthorised cellphone-number change page is used to report a cellphone number changed without the applicant’s permission.

Official source: Official SRD unauthorised cellphone-number change page

SRD profile information is sensitive

SASSA’s SRD privacy page refers to identity-profile information such as identifying numbers, contact details and credentials used across service channels.

Official source: SASSA SRD privacy page

SRD Scam Safety FAQs

Can someone guarantee SRD approval for a fee?

No. Be careful of anyone who asks for payment and promises guaranteed approval, faster pay dates or a fixed declined status.

Is it safe to share my SRD OTP?

No. Never share your OTP, PIN or SMS verification link. It can be used to access or change your SRD profile.

What if I already gave my details to a scammer?

Stop sharing information, secure your phone and banking access, check your SRD status, and contact SASSA through official routes if your profile was affected.

What if my SRD phone number was changed without permission?

Use the official unauthorised cellphone-number change route and contact SASSA if needed. Do not pay someone online to recover the profile.

Can I trust WhatsApp groups for SRD help?

Use caution. General advice may be useful, but do not share ID numbers, OTPs, banking details, addresses or screenshots with personal information.

What is the safest way to get help?

Check your status first, read the relevant guide for the issue, and use official SASSA support routes when the problem involves fraud, unauthorised changes or account access.

Is SRDLive an official SASSA website?

No. SRDLive is an independent help website. Use official SASSA and SRD routes for decisions, appeals, verification, contact updates and payment issues.