South Africa national soccer team

South Africa
NicknameBafana Bafana
AssociationSouth African Football Association (SAFA)
ConfederationCAF (Africa)
Sub-confederationCOSAFA (Southern Africa)
Head coachHugo Broos
CaptainRonwen Williams
Most capsAaron Mokoena (107)
Top scorerBenni McCarthy (31)
Home stadiumVarious
FIFA codeRSA
First colours
FIFA ranking
Current 60 1 (19 January 2026)
Highest16 (August 1996)
Lowest124 (December 1992)
First international
 Argentina 0–1 South Africa 
(Buenos Aires, Argentina; 9 July 1906)
Biggest win
 Australia 0–8 South Africa 
(Adelaide, Australia; 17 September 1955)
Biggest defeat
 South Africa 1–9 England 
(Cape Town, South Africa; 17 July 1920)
World Cup
Appearances4 (first in 1998)
Best resultGroup stage (1998, 2002, 2010)
Africa Cup of Nations
Appearances12 (first in 1996)
Best resultChampions (1996)
CONCACAF Gold Cup
Appearances1 (first in 2005)
Best resultQuarter-finals (2005)
African Nations Championship
Appearances2 (first in 2011)
Best resultQuarter-finals (2011)
Confederations Cup
Appearances2 (first in 1997)
Best resultFourth place (2009)
Websitesafa.net

The South Africa national football team represents South Africa in men's international football and is run by the South African Football Association, the governing body for football in South Africa. Nicknamed Bafana Bafana (The Boys in Zulu), the team plays at various stadiums around the country. The team is a member of both FIFA and the Confederation of African Football (CAF), is one of the most well-supported national sides in Africa, and are recognised by their traditional yellow-green kits.

Having played their first match in 1906, South Africa returned to the world stage in 1992, after sixteen years of being banned from FIFA, and forty years of effective suspension due to the apartheid system. South Africa have qualified for the FIFA World Cup three times: 1998, 2002 and 2026, in addition to qualifying as hosts of the 2010 tournament, becoming the first African nation to do so. Despite defeating France 2–1 in their final game of the group stage, they failed to progress from the first round of the tournament, becoming the first host nation in the history of the FIFA World Cup to exit in the group stage, followed by Qatar in 2022. As of January 2026, the team is ranked 60th in FIFA overall.

South Africa's most significant achievement came in 1996 when they hosted and won the Africa Cup of Nations (AFCON). They reached the final again in 1998 but were defeated by Egypt.