South African National Standards — Reference and Finder
Find the SANS that applies to your product, understand what it covers, compare to ISO and IEC equivalents, and route to the official SABS Webstore for purchase.
What are South African National Standards?
South African National Standards (SANS) are the technical specifications developed and maintained by the South African Bureau of Standards under the legislative mandate of the Standards Act, 2008 (Act 8 of 2008). The SABS catalogue contains more than 6,500 SANS documents covering product safety, performance, methodology, and management systems across every major industry sector. Many SANS are derived from or aligned with international standards published by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC). This site is an independent reference and finder for SANS — it helps you identify which SANS applies to your product, understand what the standard covers, find the international equivalent, and route to the official SABS Webstore for purchase.
Some SANS are voluntary reference standards used by industry to demonstrate best practice. Others are referenced by compulsory specifications (VCs) administered by the National Regulator for Compulsory Specifications (NRCS) under the NRCS Act, 2008 (Act 5 of 2008), which makes compliance with the underlying SANS a legal requirement for products placed on the South African market.
Find the SANS for your product
Select your product category to find the applicable South African National Standards, the relevant compulsory specification (VC) if one exists, and the route to import compliance via the PVoC programme.
Find SANS by industry
Browse South African National Standards organised by industry sector. Each industry page lists the most relevant SANS codes, the applicable compulsory specifications, and links to the SABS Webstore.
The most-searched SANS codes
These are the South African National Standards most frequently searched by importers, manufacturers, contractors, and compliance officers.
| SANS Code | Title (abbreviated) | Primary audience |
|---|---|---|
| SANS 10400 | Application of the National Building Regulations (21 parts) | Architects, contractors, engineers |
| SANS 10142 | The wiring of premises | Electricians, property developers |
| SANS ISO 9001 | Quality management systems — Requirements | Manufacturers, service providers |
| SANS 1200 | Standardised specification for civil engineering construction | Civil engineers, contractors |
| SANS 10049 | Food hygiene management — Prerequisite programmes | Food manufacturers, retailers |
| SANS 1186 | Symbolic safety signs | Safety officers, facility managers |
| SANS 3 | Fertilisers — Sampling and analysis | Agricultural importers, manufacturers |
| SANS 10400-T | National Building Regulations — Fire protection | Architects, fire engineers |
| SANS 10400-XA | National Building Regulations — Energy usage | Architects, green building consultants |
| SANS 10252 | Water supply and drainage for buildings | Plumbers, building contractors |
Management system standards
South Africa adopts ISO management system standards as SANS, typically with a dual designation (e.g., SANS ISO 9001). These standards are voluntary but are widely required by customers, procurement bodies, and export markets.
Compulsory specifications — when SANS becomes law
A compulsory specification (VC) is a regulation issued under the NRCS Act, 2008 (Act 5 of 2008) that makes compliance with a specific SANS legally mandatory for products placed on the South African market. Products covered by a VC cannot be imported, manufactured, or sold in South Africa without a valid Letter of Authority (LoA) from the NRCS.
The NRCS administers more than 100 compulsory specifications covering electrical apparatus, construction materials, automotive components, food containers, cosmetics, and more. The fastest-growing search in the SANS universe in 2026 is for the NRCS and its VC list — driven by importers seeking to understand which products require pre-shipment certification under the PVoC programme.
How to buy SANS standards
SANS documents are sold exclusively through the SABS Webstore at store.sabs.co.za. The SABS offers single-user and multi-user licences. Pricing varies by document length and classification group. Some older withdrawn standards are available at reduced cost; a small number of SANS are available free of charge as public-domain documents.
The SABS Webstore accepts credit card payment and provides immediate PDF download. Institutional subscribers can access SANS through Sabinet, the South African bibliographic network. Student discounts are available through accredited tertiary institutions.
sansstandards.co.za does not sell SANS documents. Every purchase CTA on this site links directly to the SABS Webstore or to an authorised third-party distributor.
How SANS connects to PVoC and import compliance
South Africa's Pre-Export Verification of Conformity (PVoC) programme requires that regulated products be tested and certified against the applicable SANS or VC before they are shipped to South Africa. A Certificate of Conformity (CoC) issued by an NRCS-recognised inspection body is the documentary proof that the product meets the standard.
sansstandards.co.za is the reference layer: it tells you which SANS applies to your product. pvoc.co.za is the regulatory layer: it explains the PVoC programme, the LoA process, and the country-of-origin rules. certificatesofconformity.co.za is the vault: it stores and verifies your CoC documents.
Frequently asked questions
What are SANS standards?
South African National Standards (SANS) are technical specifications published by the South African Bureau of Standards (SABS) under the Standards Act, 2008. They define minimum requirements for product safety, performance, methodology, and management systems across every major industry sector in South Africa.
Are SANS standards mandatory?
Some SANS are voluntary; others are referenced by compulsory specifications (VCs) administered by the NRCS under the NRCS Act, 2008, making compliance legally mandatory for products in scope. A product covered by a VC cannot be imported, manufactured, or sold in South Africa without a valid Letter of Authority from the NRCS.
Where can I buy SANS standards?
SANS documents are sold exclusively through the official SABS Webstore at store.sabs.co.za. sansstandards.co.za is an independent reference site that routes purchase intent to the SABS Webstore — it does not sell standards.
How many SANS standards exist?
The SABS catalogue contains more than 6,500 SANS documents covering product safety, performance, methodology, and management systems across every major industry sector.
What is the difference between SANS and SABS?
SABS is the South African Bureau of Standards — the organisation that publishes standards, operates the SABS Mark of Approval programme, and provides testing and certification services. SANS (South African National Standards) are the technical documents that SABS publishes. The two terms are often confused but refer to different things.
What is the relationship between SANS and ISO standards?
Many SANS are adopted or adapted from international standards published by ISO or IEC. Where a SANS is identical to an ISO standard, it carries a dual designation such as SANS ISO 9001. Where it is a modified adoption, the SANS designation stands alone but the international parent is noted in the standard's foreword.
What is a compulsory specification (VC)?
A compulsory specification (VC) is a regulation issued under the NRCS Act, 2008 that makes compliance with a specific SANS legally mandatory for products placed on the South African market. The NRCS administers more than 100 VCs covering electrical apparatus, construction materials, automotive components, food containers, cosmetics, and more.
How does SANS connect to PVoC import compliance?
Products imported into South Africa under the PVoC programme must comply with the relevant SANS or VC. A Certificate of Conformity (CoC) issued by an NRCS-recognised inspection body confirms compliance before the goods arrive in South Africa. See pvoc.co.za for the full regulatory explanation.