Comprehensive Guide To Contractor Registration
Comprehensive Guide To Contractor Registration
Contractor Registration
Version 6: 2017
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ABOUT THE cidb
The cidb has been established in terms of the Construction Industry Development Board Act 38 of 2000. It has the mandate to lead
construction industry stakeholders in construction development and to facilitate regulation and development of the construction
industry. The cidb is required in terms of the Construction Industry Development Board Act to establish the Register of contractors and
Register of Projects. The register of contractors grades and categorises contractors according to their capability to carry out construction
projects. All contractors seeking to participate in public sector infrastructure delivery must be registered on the cidb Register of
Contractors.
WHY REGISTER?
According to the CIDB Act of 2000 no public sector client may award construction contracts to a contractor who is not registered with
the cidb. There are 9 different grading levels according to which contractors can be registered. A grade determines the maximum Rand
value of a project as well as the type of construction works a contractor is capable to perform.
All contractors seeking to participate in public sector infrastructure delivery must be registered on the cidb register of contractors.
Contractors who are exempted from registration are:
• Home builders, unless they also wish to tender for other kinds of public sector construction work
• Those who undertake contracts consisting substantially of the provision of labour
• Those who undertake contracts consisting substantially of the provision of supplies
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HOW TO APPLY? DIAGRAM 1: Application Steps
A registered contractor’s grading designation (indicated in the first column, below), means that the contractor is considered capable of
undertaking a contract less than or equal to the value indicated in the second column - within the contractor’s registered class of works.
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TYPE OF WORK THAT CONTRACTORS CAN REGISTER FOR
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TABLE 2: Classes of Works (continued)
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Specialist Works
SB The extension, installation, repair, maintenance or renewal, or SJ The development, installation, removal, or dismantling, as
removal of asphalt. relevant, of piles and other specialised foundations for buildings
and structures.
SC The development, extension, installation, removal and SK The installation, renewal, removal, alteration or dismantling, as
dismantling, as relevant, associated with building excavations, relevant, of road markings and signage.
shaft sinking and lateral earth support.
SD The development, extension, installation, repair, renewal, SL The development, extension, installation, renewal, removal,
removal or alteration of corrosion protection systems (cathodic, renovation, alteration or dismantling of structural steelwork and
anodic and electrolytic). scaffolding.
SE Demolition of buildings and engineering infrastructure and SM Timber buildings and structures.
blasting.
SF The development, extension, installation, renewal, removal, SN The extension, installation, repair, maintenance, renewal,
renovation, alteration or dismantling of fire prevention and removal, renovation or alteration, as relevant, of the
protection infrastructure (drencher and sprinkler systems and fire waterproofing of basements, roofs and walls using specialist
installation). systems.
SG The development, extension, installation, renewal, removal, SO The development, extension, installation, renewal, removal,
renovation, alteration or dismantling of glazing, curtain walls and alteration, or dismantling or demolition of water installations and
shop fronts. soil and waste water drainage associated with buildings (wet
services and plumbing).
SH The development, extension, installation, maintenance, renewal, SQ The development, extension, installation, repairs, dismantling of
removal, alteration or dismantling, as relevant, of landscaping, precast walls, installation of wire perimeter fencing, diamond
irrigation and horticultural works. perimeter fencing, palisade steel fencing with posts and stay at
intervals.
SI The development, extension, installation, repair, maintenance, Note: For the Electrical Engineering (EB) class of construction
renewal, removal, renovation, alteration or dismantling of lifts, works the applicant must submit an originally certified and
escalators, travellators and hoisting machinery. signed electrical contractor’s certificate issued in the name of the
enterprise, by the Department of Labour.
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CAN A CONTRACTOR BE REGISTERED IN DIFFERENT GRADES?
A contractor may apply to be graded in one or several grades, however a contractor can only be registered in 1 grade per class of
works.
CONDITIONS OF REGISTRATION
• Confirm particulars provided on his application form annually on or before the anniversary date of his registration
• Pay the relevant administration fee(s), as well as the stipulated annual fee
• Notify the cidb of any change of particulars relating to an existing registration
• Be free from any restrictions to tender
• Comply with the Code of Conduct for all parties engaged in Construction Procurement, as published by the cidb in the Government
Gazette no. 25656 of 2003. (Also available on www.cidb.org.za)
• Annually provide a valid, original tax clearance certificate, upon expiry of the previous certificate, and
• Renew registration every 3 years for requalification of grades
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PROVIDING SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT YOUR APPLICATION
The cidb evaluates applications for grading and registration based on evidence of works and financial capability provided by the
contractor. Evidence is then used to determine which grade and class of works a company qualifies for. Once a grade has been
determined and approved by the Board a contractor is then able to tender for construction contracts within the approved grade. Should
the contractor fail to provide sufficient evidence to support the grade applied for, the cidb will determine an appropriate grade based on
the information at its disposal.
EXTERNAL COMPANIES
All external companies must maintain an office in South Africa and must have a registered physical address in South Africa and must be
registered with the Companies and Intellectual Property Commission (CIPC).
DEREGISTERED COMPANIES
cidb will verify the status of companies when they do annual updates, additional classes of works, upgrades, new applications and
3 year renewals. All companies that are de-registered at CIPC will be regarded as non-compliant and the non-compliant process will
be followed and this can lead to the suspension or cancellation of the specific application if the documents requested are not
submitted within the specified time period.
Please note that providing false information or false declaration is a punishable offence in terms of the cidb Act, Construction
Industry Regulations and other applicable laws.
The largest contract completed during the 5 years immediately preceding the application, in the class of construction works applied for,
as indicated in Table 5.
Works capability
Designation Maximum value of contract that a contractor is Largest contract completed, during the 5 years
considered capable of performing immediately preceding the application, in the class of
construction works applied for
2 R 650 000 R 130 000
3 R 2 000 000 R 450 000
4 R 4 000 000 R 900 000
5 R 6 500 000 R 1 500 000
6 R 13 000 000 R 3 000 000
7 R 40 000 000 R 9 000 000
8 R 130 000 000 R 30 000 000
9 No limit R 90 000 000
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Important Notes When Submitting Track Record
a. Letter of Award: An award letter must be on a letterhead of the client, must be addressed to the contractor who was awarded the
contract and must include the tender/service order number and the contract amount. The award letter must be signed and dated by
an official from the client.
Please Note That Track Record Equating to Substantial Supply of Materials, Provision of Labour and Plant Hire Will Not Be
Accepted as Track Record for cidb Registration.
b. Certificate of Completion: The Certificate of Completion must be on a letterhead of the client, must be addressed to the
contractor who was awarded the contract and must include the tender/service order number and the contract amount. The Letter
of Completion must be signed and dated by an official from the client.
It should include all part payments made and must read as Final Payment Certificate.
• The Final Payment Certificate must be signed and dated by an official from the client. For public sector track record the
payment stubs from the financial systems used by the public sector client (e.g. BAS) will be accepted, if only one payment was
made.
Note: If track record was from a private sector client or was a sub contract, the contractor’s supporting copies of bank statements must
be provided, the bank statements must reflect payments received from the client into the company’s account. The bank statement must
correlate with the initial project award value and must be stamped by the bank. Where the payments references on the bank statements
do not indicate either the client name or the project name, then copies of the invoices matching the payment must be submitted.
Depending on the contractor grading designation applied for, your financial capability will be determined from:
• Best annual turnover from the 2 financial years immediately preceding the application
• The contractor must satisfy all the criteria relating to financial capability
• The available capital that they are able to mobilise
NB: Full set of financial statements are required for grading designation 3 - 9. Financial statements that are not audited must be accompanied by
VAT Returns (VAT 201 and VAT Statement of Account or copies of Bank Statements).
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The available capital is calculated by adding any financial sponsorships to the sum of the net asset value of a contractor as indicated in
the contractor’s financial statements, subject to the contribution made by financial sponsorships to available capital being limited to the
values provided in Table 3 (NAV & Sponsorship)
A financial sponsorship must be a collectable financial guarantee by one person to another, (the beneficiary)
To determine financial capability the cidb takes the following into consideration:
1. The best annual turnover of the two financial years immediately preceding the application
2. Available Capital. The cidb calculates available capital by adding any financial sponsorship to the sum of the net asset value of a
contract as indicated in the most recent financial statements. Net Asset Value is the difference between the total assets and total
liabilities of a company as reflected in the company’s most recent financial statements.
3. Financial Sponsorship. Financial sponsorship must be a collectable financial guarantee by one person ( a sponsor) to another (the
beneficiary). Financial sponsorship must be:
• A determined amount to support operations of the contractor concerned in order to complete projects. Any sponsorship from
another company other than a financial institution may not exceed 15% of the sponsor’s net asset value.
• Available to the beneficiary
• If applicable, it must be available to a third person, such as a bank, to advance funds or such as a supplier, to advance line of
credit
• If applicable, it must be in a form acceptable to any financial institution in South Africa as defined in the Financial Services
Board Act 97 of 1990.
Please note that:
a) Where the sponsor is a registered contractor or owns 50% or more of the applicant contractor, sponsorship may constitute up
to 100% of the total required available capital.
b) Where the sponsor is not a registered contractor and owns 25% or more of the applicant contractor, sponsorship may not
exceed 75% of the total required available capital and
c) Where the contractor is not a registered contractor and the sponsor owns less than 25% of the applicant contractor,
sponsorship may not exceed 50% of the total required available capital.
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TABLE 4: Determining the Maximum Contribution of Sponsorship to Available Capital (AC)
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POTENTIALLY EMERGING ENTERPRISES
A registered, potentially emerging contractor may be awarded a contract at one level higher than the enterprise’s registered contractor
grading designation,if the client or employer:
• is satisfied that such a contractor has the potential to develop and qualify to be registered in that higher grade;and
• ensures that financial management or other support is provided - in the context of a targeted development programme - to enable
the contractor to successfully execute that contract.
JOINT VENTURES
• A joint venture is a grouping of two or more contractors who jointly undertake to perform a construction works contract.
• Any enterprise that tenders or renders a contract for construction works with the public sector, must be registered. Once-off joint
ventures do not have to register. Each partner of the joint venture must be separately registered and the lead partner must have a
contract or grading designation not lower than one level below the required grading designation in the class of construction works
under consideration.
• The contractor grading designation for a once-off joint venture is assessed by the client, based on:
- the sum of the best annual turnover of all the members of the joint venture;
- the sum of the available capital of all the members of the joint venture;and
- The cidb has developed a calculator to enable assessment of joint ventures. This calculator is available on the cidb website at
www.cidb.org.za.
Notwithstanding any calculation, the following partnerships amongst registered contractors are deemed to satisfy the contractor
grading requirements for a joint venture in the following designations:
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TABLE 7: Contractor Registration Fees
Tender Value Range Class of Construction Works Admin Fee Payable (determined by the
tender value range applied for)
2 GB R 450
8 CE R 750
Sub-Total R 1200
Plus Annual Fee(determined by highest tender value range applied for R 29 000
Total Due (Total admin plus annual fee) R 30 200
PAYMENT
Note:
• Please use your enterprise name as the reference when making payment.
• Contractors already registered with the cidb, should please use their cidb registration number (CRS number) as reference.
• Please note that the cidb does not accept cash payments and cheques over the counter.
CHECKLIST
Use the Checklist to make sure that you are submitting all the required supporting information. If you are not required to complete a
specific section of the form, you are also not required to submit their required supporting documentation.
• Double check that you have filled in all the required information correctly.
• Use the Checklist to make sure that you have attached all the required supporting documentation.
• Keep a copy of the application for your own records.
• Deliver your completed application, along with proof of payment and supporting documentation, to the nearest Provincial Office.
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CHECKLIST FOR SUPPORTING DOCUMENTATION
Provide the following supporting documentation only for those sections you had to complete.
Received
Supplied by
(office use
contractor
only)
Yes No Yes No
SECTION B (i): Enterprise Particulars
Close Corporation (latest CK1/CK2)
Company: • Certificate of Incorporation (CM1)/CoR 14.3
• List of all active directors (CM29)/CoR 39
• Share certificates (must be originally certified by Commissioner of Oaths). The validity
period of certification is three months.
• All name change certificates (CM9) (if applicable)
Partnership (partnership agreement)
Trust (a copy of the trust deed or JM21)
Co-operatives – CR 10 (Certificate of Incorporation). A list of all directors in a table format with their
names, surnames, ID numbers, addresses and signed by all
SECTION B (ii): Principals and Ownership/Interest
Attach originally certified copies of Identity Documents. The validity period for certification is 3 months.
(Must be certified by Commissioner of Oaths). For external Companies, orginally notorised copy of
passport.
SECTION B(iii): Tax Clearance Certificate
Attach valid and original Tax Clearance Certificate or a copy of SARS Tax Compliance status pin and copy of Tax Clearance Certificate
SECTION D: Financial Requirements
Attach a complete set of financial statements (compliant with IFRS or IFRS for SMEs) for the 2 financial
years immediately preceding the application (Attach SARS VAT 201 forms and VAT Statement of
Account OR stamped business bank statements for verification of turnover for the period in question)
• Public/Private company – as per the provision of Companies Act No. 71 of 2008 as amended
• Trust – as per the provision of Companies Act No. 71 of 2008 as amended
• Close Corporation – as per the provision of the Close Corporation Act No. 69 of 1984 as amended
• Partnership – as per the provision of Companies Act No. 71 of 2008 as amended
• Co-operatives – as per the provision of Co-op Act No. 14 of 2005 as amended
• Sole Traders – compiled by a Bookkeeper or Accounting Officer
SECTION D (i): Available Capital
Description and proof of financial sponsorship(s)
• Registered financial institution sponsorship OR
• If sponsor is a not a financial institution please attach the sponsors latest set of financial statements
(compliant with IFRS) and
• Letter of sponsorship undertaking in the form of a members resolution from a Close Corporation OR
a board resolution from the sponsoring company
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Received
Supplied by
(office use
contractor
only)
Yes No Yes No
SECTION E: Track Record
For each class of works applied for, attach copies of:
• Letter of award on a letterhead of the client and addressed to contractor, signed and dated
• Certificate of completion; and
• Final payment certificate indicating the contract value. Maintenance contractors must provide latest
payment certificate and a confirmation letter from the client/consultant indicating the value of work
done to date.
• Joint Venture agreement (if applicable);
• Sub-contract agreement and corresponding stamped bank statements.
• Private Sector Contract – Purchase Orders, Contract Agreement, Tax Invoices and corresponding
stamped bank statements.
• Projects with more than one Class of Work – Submit a breakdown showing the value of each class of
work applied for (breakdown must be on client’s or consultant’s letterhead and signed)
SECTION E (iv): Transfer of Records
Attach particulars of change as per Regulations 11 (4), (4A) and (4B)
SECTION F : Requirements for Registration in Electrical Engineering for EB class of works
Attach originally certified and signed copy of the enterprise’s valid Electrical Contractor’s Certificate
*NB: (The validity period for certification is 3 months) (Must be certified by Commissioner of Oaths)
SECTION H: Payment of Fees
Attach proof of payment (please use your company name or CRS number as the reference number
when making payment)
SECTION I: Declaration
Ensure that the declaration is signed
* Please ensure that all documents are submitted in English. All documents not in English must be translated. Foreign documents must
be translated and originally notarised.
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Gauteng Provincial Office KwaZulu-Natal Provincial Office
Pretoria • [email protected] Durban • [email protected]
email: [email protected]
www.cidb.org.za