Services SETA Opens 2026/27 Grant: Franchisors in the Services Sector Need to Move Now

The Services SETA will open applications for its 2026/27 Discretionary Grant on 10 November 2025. For franchisors in the services sector, this is a direct route to funding accredited training programmes and reducing the cost of skills development across your network. But the window is tight and the rules are strict.

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FranchiseKing articles are editorial information and AI-assisted franchise intelligence, not professional advice. Use them as a starting point for your own due diligence.

The Services SETA has confirmed its 2026/27 Discretionary Grant window, and franchisors in the services sector should pay close attention. Applications open at 08:00 on 10 November 2025 and close at 15:00 on 9 December 2025. Late, manual or emailed submissions will not be accepted. FranchiseKing is watching this because it offers a rare opportunity to fund accredited learning and workplace-based programmes — from learnerships to apprenticeships, skills programmes, RPL and candidacy — directly reducing the cost burden on franchisees and the network. For a sector that relies on consistent service standards and skilled staff, this is a funding lever that is too often left on the table.

What is on offer

The grant covers a range of accredited programmes, including:

  • Learnerships
  • Apprenticeships
  • ARPL (Artisan Recognition of Prior Learning)
  • RPL (Recognition of Prior Learning)
  • Skills Programmes
  • AET (Adult Education and Training)
  • Candidacy programmes Crucially, only programmes that appear on the Sector Priority Occupations and Interventions List (SPOIL) or address hard-to-fill vacancies will be considered. Proposals outside those lists will not be funded. That means you need to check Annexure A (the SPOIL and hard-to-fill vacancies list) before you even start drafting your application.

Who can apply Eligible entities include:

  • Services SETA employers (this includes many franchisors in the services sector)
  • Business associations and professional bodies
  • Trade unions
  • Accredited Skills Development Providers within the services sector

What to watch

  • Applications open at 08:00 on 10 November 2025. That is 28 days in total, including weekends.
  • The closing time is 15:00 on 9 December 2025. Don’t test the deadline.
  • Manual or emailed submissions are automatically rejected. Use the official portal only.
  • Your proposed programmes must be aligned with the Sector Skills Plan, the 2026/27 Annual Performance Plan, and the National Skills Development Plan 2030.
  • The full list of funded programmes is in Table 1 of the advert. The SPOIL and hard-to-fill vacancies list is in Annexure A. Both are available on the Services SETA website.

Questions buyers should ask

  • Is my franchisor or prospective franchisor registered as a Services SETA employer?
  • Do the training programmes I need (e.g., for my staff) appear on the SPOIL or hard-to-fill list?
  • Who in the franchise network will handle the application — the franchisor or an individual franchisee?
  • Can the franchisor coordinate a group application across multiple franchisees to simplify compliance?
  • What happens if the grant is approved but the programme delivery timeline slips?

FranchiseKing take

This is not free money with no strings. The Services SETA is funding programmes that demonstrate a clear pipeline to skilled, employable candidates. For franchisors, the smart play is to coordinate with your franchisees and your accredited training provider before the application window opens. A single, well-structured application that covers multiple franchise outlets will have more weight than a scatter of small ones. Don’t let the administrative hassle put you off — the cost saving could be substantial, especially for networks with high staff turnover or tight margins. If you are a franchise buyer looking at a services sector brand, ask the franchisor directly: “Are you active with SETA grants, and can I access that funding as a franchisee?”

Sources

Why it matters

This signal matters because it gives buyers, operators and franchisors a practical prompt for what to verify next before acting on the headline.

Who is affected

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Opportunity and risk

Medium attention required. This rating is editorial guidance for further investigation, not financial advice.

Related sectors

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Sources

Use this article as a starting point for your own due diligence. FranchiseKing content is editorial and AI-assisted; it is not professional advice or a guarantee of accuracy, outcome or suitability. Read the full disclaimer and AI content policy.

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