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What Payday Super means for you

In early November 2025, the Treasury Laws Amendment (Payday Superannuation) Bill 2025 completed its passage through Parliament. The new law means that from 1 July 2026, employers must pay compulsory super contributions for their staff at the same time as their wages.

Figures from the Super Members Council (SMC) reveal that unpaid super costs Australians $110 million a week in retirement savings, with the average worker missing out on $1,730 in the 2022–23 financial year.

Payday Super marks the end of quarterly deadlines for super contributions and makes it simpler for employees and the Australian Tax Office (ATO) to verify that the right amount of super is being paid on time.

The reform also brings a simpler and more proactive system for the ATO to recover unpaid super and interest on late contributions, with large financial penalties for employers who don’t comply. These changes are expected to significantly reduce the toll of unpaid super on workers.

Payment deadlines

The Payday Super rules will apply to the compulsory superannuation guarantee (SG) contributions your employer must provide, set at 12% of your ‘qualifying earnings’. Qualifying earnings is a new term and includes:

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  • Your ordinary time earnings (OTE)
  • Any ordinary time earnings you have chosen to salary sacrifice into super
  • Payments that were included within the term ‘salary or wages’ under the old law for independent contractors who must be paid super because they are paid wholly or principally for their labour.

Learn more about the Superannuation Guarantee (SG).

The new terminology won’t change the amount of super most employers need to pay.

To be on time under Payday Super, SG contributions must generally arrive at your super fund within seven business days of payday. This is a big change from the current deadline of 28 days after the end of each quarter. For example, contributions for income earned during April–June are currently due on 28 July.

An extension is available if you’re a new employee or you have asked your employer to start contributing to a different super fund.

The first contribution to a new fund or for a new employee must arrive at the fund within 20 business days of payday. Contributions for later pay are due either seven business days after payday or on the same day as the first contribution, whichever is later. This method prevents a situation where contributions from newer pay periods are due before the contributions from earlier pay periods have been processed.

Example: Mo chooses a new super fund

Mo has worked at the same job for five years and his employer has been paying his super to REST. In August 2026, Mo completes a standard choice form to inform his employer that future super contributions should be paid to his new account with HostPlus.

Mo’s first payday after the change to his super fund is processed occurs on 12 August. The deadline for his employer’s SG contribution from this pay to reach HostPlus is 9 September (20 business days after payday).

Mo’s next payday is 26 August. The usual deadline for the contribution from this pay is 4 September (seven business days after the payday) which is before the due date of the first contribution. To avoid contributions being due out of order, the deadline for this contribution is extended to match the earlier one and it is also due on 9 September.

An extension to the usual deadline is also available for contributions that relate to payments you receive out of your normal pay cycle, such as bonuses, commissions and payments in advance. If you receive a payment like this on a date that is not a normal payday for you, the deadline for the SG contribution that goes with it is seven days after your next payday.

Your employer’s obligations will be met if their SG contribution arrives at your super fund within the required timeframe and with the correct information your fund needs to process it. Your fund can take up to a further three business days to allocate the contribution to you. Most funds will backdate the transaction in your account to the day they received the money.

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What if my employer pays late or doesn’t pay?

When an SG contribution is not paid by the deadline or is underpaid, interest begins to accumulate on the missing amount. Interest is charged at the general interest charge (GIC) rate and compounded daily. The GIC is defined as the 90-day bank bill rate plus 7%.

The ATO will track contributions and issue your employer with an SG charge assessment when contributions are late, unpaid or underpaid. ATO tracking is done with data from single touch payroll and super fund contribution reporting, as well as voluntary notifications from employers.

This new system is an improvement from the current regime that largely relies on employers to notify the ATO when their payments are late.

If your employer is issued with an SG charge assessment, they must pay any late SG contributions they have not already sent to your super fund, the interest charges, and an administrative charge. Employers who submit voluntary reports before an assessment is issued can have the administration charge reduced, encouraging them to self-report.

The amount on the assessment, plus interest compounded daily at the GIC rate, must be paid to the ATO. The ATO will then send the late contribution and the interest that has accumulated on it to your super account. The ATO keeps the administrative charge and any interest on that charge to cover the cost of enforcement.

Example: Late payment

Joanna is paid monthly. For her payday on 15 September 2026, she earned $8,000. Her employer’s SG contribution of $960 was due on 24 September, seven business days after payday.

Joanna’s super fund didn’t receive the contribution until 15 October.

The ATO issued Joanna’s employer with an SG charge assessment for the late contribution on 30 October.

The assessment showed interest of $5.54 for the 21 days the contribution was delayed, plus an administrative charge of $3.32 (60% of the amount of the assessment). The full amount of the late contribution had already been received by the super fund, so the assessment didn’t include any contributions.

Joanna’s employer has 28 days to pay the amount on the assessment plus interest to the ATO without incurring additional late penalties. The ATO will then send $5.54 plus the additional interest on that amount to Joanna’s super fund.

Example: Missing payment

Mladen resigned from his job and received $5,000 on 15 July 2026 in his last pay. His employer was required to pay $600 of SG to his super fund by 24 July for that pay cycle.

The employer did not make any contributions.

On 1 September, the ATO issued an SG charge assessment to Mladen’s ex-employer. It showed:

$600 unpaid contribution

+

$6.28 interest

+

$363.77 administrative penalty (60% x $606.28)

=

$970.05 total

The employer must pay $970.05 plus interest to the ATO within 28 days of the assessment to avoid further late penalties. The ATO will then send $606.28 (the late contribution and interest on the assessment) plus the further interest accumulated on that amount to Mladen’s super fund.

The late payment system is designed to make sure you receive interest for the entire period your employer’s contributions are delayed. This compensates you for investment earnings you could have accumulated in your super fund if the contribution was on time.

Salary-sacrifice arrangements

If you have an arrangement with your employer to salary sacrifice some of your pay into super, they will generally send your salary sacrifice to your fund at the same time as their SG contributions.

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Payday Super means that from 1 July 2026, your salary sacrifice may also arrive at your fund more often and more quickly than before.

However, the law does not specifically provide payment deadlines for salary-sacrifice contributions. Your employer could choose to pay your salary sacrifice later and/or less often than they are required to pay their compulsory SG amounts. It’s worth checking with your pay office to find out and getting an agreement in writing.

Learn more about Salary sacrificing super.

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