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The Emergency Medical Services (EMS) landscape is at a critical inflection point, requiring strategic transformation to address complex healthcare challenges. The evolution is imperative to enhance clinical service delivery, optimise patient outcomes and successfully integrate emerging technologies within the unique South African context. The paramedicine profession faces multifaceted challenges, including accelerated urbanisation patterns, increasing population density, and the distinctive quadruple burden of disease profile characteristics of South Africa. Through applying a future studies framework, this commentary explores key drivers influencing both probable and preferable future trajectories of EMS in South Africa. Implementation of clinically reflexive methodologies, specifically designed to understand and respond to patient-specific needs, represents a fundamental requirement for service enhancement. However, such approaches remain difficult to operationalise without structured mechanisms that effectively incorporate localised contextual insights and community-based intelligence. The paramedicine profession in South Africa continues to experience significant attrition of highly skilled and experienced personnel, exacerbating systemic challenges. Addressing these critical gaps requires multidimensional interventions – through strategic adaption to a living healthcare system, adaptive capacity development, and fostering a culture of inclusivity and methodologies to mitigate institutional knowledge erosion. These strategic interventions collectively contribute to a preferable trajectory of EMS in South Africa – one characterised by equitable and accessible healthcare to meet the unique needs of the population. Furthermore, contemporary analysis suggests a fundamental misalignment between the traditional EMS paradigm and actual population healthcare needs, with evidence suggesting many patients primarily require access to healthcare services rather than immediate emergency interventions. This distinction calls for a recalibration of EMS’ core functional parameters to achieve greater congruence with South Africa's broader healthcare priorities.