The Shoprite Group runs four distinct bursary programmes under its 2026 intake, each aligned to a business unit. Understanding which part of the Shoprite programme you'd be joining matters, especially if you're writing a motivation letter.
Supply Chain & Logistics
Business Unit — Distribution & Logistics
Min. Aggregate — 60%+
Age Limit — ≤ 27 years
Reach — Nationwide
Accounting — CA Stream (SAICA)
Business Unit — Finance
Min. Aggregate — 65%+
Programme — SAICA Trainee (3-year rotation)
Province — Western Cape
Retail Business Management
Business Unit — Retail Operations
Min. Aggregate — 60%+
Career Path — Trainee Retail Manager
Reach — National
Agricultural Sciences (Freshmark)
Business Unit — Freshmark (Perishables)
Min. Aggregate — 60%+
Focus — Crop / Plant Production
Province — Western Cape
Is This Busaries Right For You?
Let's be straight with each other. A lot of people apply for bursaries they are not actually eligible for, and waste weeks of effort. Read this section very careful before you start filling in forms.
Supply Chain & Logistics
Apply if you are…
Enrolled in a BCom Logistics, BCom Supply Chain, BSc Operational Research, or a recognised SC&L Diploma
In your 2nd, 3rd, or 4th year — not a first-year student
Carrying a 60%+ cumulative average across your modules
An SA citizen under 27, genuinely interested in FMCG distribution
Don't waste your time if…
You are in your first year — this bursary is for registered students already in progress
You are studying Industrial Engineering and thinking it "counts" — it doesn't unless supply chain is the focus
Your cumulative average is below 60% — the system will screen you out
You plan to apply via email — those applications are explicitly not considered
Accounting — CA Stream (SAICA)
Apply if you are…
Registered for a CA-stream BCom Accounting or BAcc specifically — not just any Commerce degree
At PGDA or CTA level and still looking for a training office — this is a direct SAICA training office opportunity
Comfortable with a Western Cape work placement after graduation
Meeting the 65% aggregate — the highest bar across all four streams
Don't waste your time if…
You are doing a general BCom (not CA-stream) — the SAICA accreditation requirement is firm
You cannot or will not relocate to the Western Cape (Brackenfell)
Your aggregate is between 60–64% — the 65% floor is non-negotiable here
You are seeking audit firm exposure — this is a commerce training office, not a Big Four environment
Retail Business Management
Apply if you are…
Enrolled in a Diploma in Retail Business Management — this is very specific
Genuinely open to a retail management career (the bursary feeds directly into their Trainee Manager pipeline)
Looking for the most accessible entry point — 60 spots is the largest pool by far
Comfortable working anywhere nationally, as placement is not province-specific
Don't waste your time if…
You are doing a BCom in Marketing or a general Business degree — the Diploma in Retail Business Management is the stated qualification
You want a corporate HQ role right away — early placement is in-store management
You haven't checked your average recently — the 60% floor still applies
Agricultural Sciences (Freshmark)
Apply if you are…
Studying Horticulture, Agronomy, AgriEconomics, AgriBusiness, or a degree with a Crop/Plant Production focus
Interested in the perishables and fresh produce supply chain — Freshmark is the group's specialist arm
Open to a Western Cape base post-graduation
Carrying a 60%+ average in your current year
Don't waste your time if…
Your agricultural focus is livestock, game, or dry-land grain farming — Freshmark deals in fresh produce
You have a Food Technology background — that's a different Shoprite pipeline
You're not prepared for a retail-linked agricultural role, which differs from research or extension work.
Tips to Strengthen Your Application
These come from understanding how corporate bursary shortlisting actually works and what differentiates a successful application from a rejected one that looks the same on paper.
Frame your motivation letter around Shoprite's business language, not your personal goals
Most applicants write about what the bursary will do for them. Flip it. Shoprite's adverts use specific language: "FMCG retailer," "distribution," "largest distributor of grocery products in Africa," "commerce industry." Mirror that language. For the Retail stream: write about operational scale, store-level leadership, and the challenge of managing high-volume consumer goods. For CA stream: mention the value of commercial exposure over audit-only training. For Agri: reference the importance of fresh produce logistics in food security. Screeners read hundreds of letters — alignment with the company's own terminology signals genuine research.
Upload your full academic transcript, not just your most recent results
The aggregate requirement (60% or 65%) is cumulative. If your Year 1 results are strong but Year 2 dipped, include a brief, honest note in your cover letter acknowledging the dip and your recovery — screeners respect self-awareness far more than unexplained inconsistency. Most importantly, do not wait for your most recent semester results if they are still being processed. Upload what you have, annotate clearly, and indicate that updated results will be supplied on request. An incomplete submission is worse than a complete one with a pending transcript note. Make sure your student registration certificate is current (2026 year of study) — an outdated registration document is a common, avoidable disqualifier.
Apply in April, not the last week of May
The closing date is 31 May 2026, but corporate bursary processes actually begin shortlisting in rolling batches, applications reviewed as they come in, not all at once at closing. Submitting in the final week means you're competing for whatever spots remain after earlier applicants have already been shortlisted. This is especially important for the CA stream (only 10 spots) and the Agricultural stream (also 10 spots). Aim to have your application submitted and all supporting documents attached by the last week of April. Use the email address bursary@shoprite.co.za for queries only — your actual application must go through the Shoprite careers portal.
Why This Bursary Matters Right Now
South Africa's graduate unemployment rate continues to be one of the most acute post-education challenges in the country. Having a degree or diploma is increasingly necessary — but it is no longer sufficient. What differentiates a graduate who lands a role from one who doesn't is often traceable to one thing: structured industry access before they graduate.
That is exactly what the Shoprite bursary structure is designed to provide. The Retail Business Management stream doesn't just fund your studies — it explicitly guarantees employment on completion. In an environment where youth unemployment sits above 45%, a guaranteed entry into Africa's largest food retailer is not a footnote. It is the entire point.
For CA candidates specifically, this is an underrated training office. Big Four firms and banking SAICA training offices receive enormous application volumes. Shoprite's programme offers three-year rotational exposure across the full breadth of a R200+ billion revenue business — treasury, tax, financial reporting, internal audit, and commercial finance — within one employer. Trainees often develop a more rounded commercial profile than audit-track peers. In 2026, with the cost of PGDA and CTA studies rising and NSFAS coverage for postgraduate studies remaining limited, having your studies funded by a SAICA-accredited training office removes a significant financial barrier to the CA(SA) designation.
Apply early. Apply deliberately. And apply to the stream that actually fits your qualification, not the one that sounds most prestigious.