Cape Town has long been hailed as the “Hollywood of Africa.” From the neon-soaked streets of the CBD to the rugged cliffs of the peninsula, our city is a global stage. But according to recent changes in the City of Cape Town Filming By-law (2024/2025), that stage now officially includes your private living room—and the City believes it doesn’t need a warrant to enter it.
The All-Access Clause
The friction centers on Section 9(1)(a) of the new By-law. It empowers “authorised officials”—ranging from Law Enforcement to SAPS—to enter “any property” to investigate compliance. While the City argues this is a tool to manage “nuisances” like noise or traffic on large-scale sets, the legal phrasing is dangerously broad.
In its current form, the law doesn’t distinguish between a 200-person international blockbuster and a single YouTuber filming a product review for profit in an suburban lounge. If you are filming for commercial gain, the City claims the right to walk through your front door to check your paperwork.
A Constitutional Collision Course
This isn’t just a “bureaucratic hiccup.” As Councillor Karl Bodin (CAPEXIT) pointed out in a fiery Council session on March 31, 2026, this provision appears to fly directly in the face of the South African Constitution.
Section 14 (The Right to Privacy) is explicit: Everyone has the right not to have their home, property, or possessions searched without due process. In South African law, the “inner sanctum” of a private home is sacred. By granting officials the power to enter private land without a warrant or consent, the City is effectively attempting to demote a Constitutional right to a “municipal suggestion.”
Breaking the Standard
The By-law also sidesteps the Criminal Procedure Act (CPA). Under Section 22 of the CPA, a warrantless search is only legal if there is “urgent necessity”—meaning an officer believes a warrant would be granted, but the delay would result in evidence being destroyed (e.g., a violent crime or drug trafficking).
Failing to have a R2,000 “micro-shoot” permit for a social media video hardly meets the threshold of a national emergency. As Bodin noted, “This is a warrantless raid on the right to privacy… It is ultra vires (beyond legal power) and this tyranny won’t survive in court.”
Strangling the Creative Economy
Beyond the legalities, there is the human cost. Cape Town’s creative economy is increasingly driven by independent creators, influencers and micro-studios. These “small filmmakers” are now trapped in a permit maze. The Film Permit Office has become a gatekeeper to the very private spaces citizens pay rates and taxes to own.
If a content creator films a sponsored “Get Ready With Me” video in their bedroom, are they now a “commercial film set” subject to inspection? According to the new by-law, the answer is a terrifying “maybe.”
Security vs Sanctity
The City of Cape Town has a legitimate interest in ensuring that massive film productions don’t block our roads or keep neighbourhoods awake until 3:00 AM. However, that interest ends at the threshold of a private front door.
If the City wishes to remain a champion of the creative economy, it must repeal the overreach of Section 9(1)(a). We cannot allow “film-friendly” to become “privacy-hostile.”
Under these new changes, a shoot with merely camera, sound and a host, filmed in a private kitchen, would be in default of these laws. A larger shoot filming on private farmland, the same. This does not bode well for the smaller and lower budget shoots.
The Constitution isn’t a prop and our homes are not public sets.
References:
- City of Cape Town: Filming By-law, 2024, Section 9(1)(a).
- Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, Section 14.
- Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977, Section 22.
- Cllr Karl Bodin, Press Release, Council Session, 31 March 2026.