Rupert Bets Big on Private Healthcare but NHI Still Looms
– July 3, 2026
4 min read
Remgro has just completed its biggest healthcare deal ever, and it says as much about South Africa’s growing private enclaves as it does about NHI.
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Remgro,Johann Rupert’s investment company, announced this week that it has taken full ownership of Mediclinic Southern Africa in a deal worthnearly$1 billion (about R16.2 billion).
This gives Remgro control of nearly 50 private hospitals, close to 9 000 beds, the Intercare clinic network, and ER24 emergency services. The deal closed while South Africa’s National Health Insurance (NHI) Act remains suspended by court order
But Rupert is not simply betting on private healthcare despite NHI. He is also hedging against it. And the deal points to something bigger than one hospital group: the steady growth of private, self-contained systems that South Africans who can afford it now rely on instead of the state
What the Deal Means
Remgro and its partner, Investment Holding Limited (IHL), used to each own 50.0% of Mediclinic. Under the new deal, Remgro takes full ownership of the Southern African business, while IHL takes full ownership of the group’s Swiss hospitals. The two companies still jointly own healthcare assets in the Middle East and the United Kingdom
Mediclinic Southern Africa employs more than 21 400 people and its contribution to Remgro’s earnings rose 57.5% in the most recent reporting period, making it one of the group’s best-performing assets
Mediclinic has 46 hospitals in South Africa and three in Namibia
NHI is Stuck, Not Scrapped
NHI aims to build a single state fund that buys healthcare services from public and private providers. Once fully implemented, it would limit medical schemes to covering only what the NHI Fund does not
Right now, that plan is frozen. Nine separate court challenges are underway. In February, the government agreed to pause the main legal battles and promised not to bring any part of the Act into force until the Constitutional Court rules on a narrower question: whether Parliament properly consulted the public before passing the law. Judgement has not yet been delivered. If the challenge succeeds, Parliament may need to redo the consultation process, which would cause a delay of years. The court has already struck down a separate part of the law, the ability to demand from providers a so-called certificate of need before allowing them to provide services, which would have given government more control over where private hospitals and private medical providers could operate.
NHI has not been defeated, but the road to full implementation is far longer and less certain than the government originally thought
A Bet and a Hedge, at the Same Time
Rupert is betting that private healthcare stays essential to South Africa for years to come, court case or not
But full ownership is also protection against a version of NHI that may eventually arrive. A single, fully integrated operator, with hospitals, clinics and emergency services under one roof, is far better placed to negotiate NHI contracts on workable terms than a business still sharing decisions with a foreign partner. If NHI ends up buying selected services from private providers, as the law allows, size and control let Mediclinic set the terms of that relationship rather than have the terms set for it. If NHI stalls for years instead, Remgro simply keeps a highly profitable private hospital group. Either outcome works. That is the hedge.
One Hospital Group, a Much Bigger Pattern
Mediclinic does not stand alone. It sits alongside private security firms, gated estates, backup power and solar systems, private schools, and business districts that fund their own policing and cleaning. Each exists for the same reason: the public version, whether that is South African Police Service, Eskom, municipal water, or a state hospital, has become unreliable enough that anyone who can afford it builds or buys a private substitute instead
That is what South Africa’s enclaves really are. Not just walls and booms, but working systems of quality healthcare, security, electricity, and schooling, which operate parallel to the state rather than through it. Full Remgro ownership of Mediclinic fits neatly into this picture. It is private capital consolidating and strengthening its own systems while it waits to see whether NHI becomes a reality. The stronger that private system becomes, the less urgent state repair feels to the people who can already opt out of needing it, and the wider the gap grows for those who cannot.
The Other Side
The current suspension of NHI is only a tactical retreat; it does not mean it has been defeated. The government has said clearly that it intends to press ahead once the courts rule, and a decision in its favour could allow implementation to resume fairly quickly. Rupert’s move does not assume NHI fails. It assumes that whatever shape NHI eventually takes, a large, well-run private operator is better positioned than a fragmented one. Whether that strengthens South Africa’s healthcare overall or simply builds a better enclave for those who can already afford one is the question the deal leaves open.
Either way Rupert wins
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