A group of radical lawmakers, led by populist firebrand Julius Malema, have vowed to prevent Zuma from speaking until he has answered questions about the USD 24 million of taxpayers' money spent on "security upgrades" at his private residence.
The last time that happened in August riot police were sent in and the session collapsed in chaos.
This time there is even more at stake, as the nation will be watching on live television.
The proceedings inside parliament will also be broadcast live, and viewer numbers are expected to reach a record high as the nation tunes in not so much to hear what Zuma has to say about the state of the nation, as to see what happens.
Also Read
The 25 Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF), MPs, who punch way above their weight in the 400-seat parliament dominated by Zuma's African National Congress, will provide a striking sartorial counterpoint the men in their usual uniforms of red overalls, gumboots and hard hats and the women in maids' outfits.
As tension mounted in the days ahead of the looming confrontation, church leaders and others tried to broker peace, but Malema has repeatedly said he will not back down at one stage going so far as to say he wouldn't allow Zuma to "clear his throat" before pressing for answers to his questions.
His party said in a statement it had learned that police would be called in to parliament to "manhandle and arrest" EFF members.
Although similar measures have been taken for the address in previous years, the parliamentary leader of the main opposition Democratic Alliance, Mmusi Maimane, said that this year "the security is insane, it is absolutely insane".