Are polygraph tests still useful in employment disputes?

In the recent case of Poggenpoel and Another v Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration and Others (C253/2022) [2025] ZALCCT 69 (1 September 2025), the Labour Court dealt with, among other things, the employer’s reliance on its employees’ refusal to be subjected to polygraph tests to justify their dismissal.

29 Sep 2025 1 min read Employment Law Alert Article

At a glance

  • When an employee refuses to submit to a polygraph test, an adverse inference can only be drawn under specific circumstances, such as instances where the employee is contractually obliged to undergo a polygraph test.
  • In instances where an employee fails a polygraph test, adverse inferences should only be drawn when there is supporting proof of scientific validity of the polygraph results.
  • Commissioners at the Commission for Conciliation, Mediation and Arbitration must assess all proven facts when drawing an inference and explain why the inference is the most plausible inference from all those that are conceivable. Selective reliance undermines reasonableness.

15163 Alert- Employment 29 September 2025

15163 Alert- Employment 29 September 20252

15163 Alert- Employment 29 September 20253

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