One of the biggest changes to hit Australian payroll in a generation is now less than two months away. From 1 July 2026, employers must pay superannuation contributions on payday — within seven business days of each wage payment — rather than quarterly. If your payroll systems, processes, and cash flow planning are not ready, the consequences can be significant.
Under the current rules, employers have been able to accumulate super obligations and pay them quarterly. Under Payday Super, that buffer disappears. Every time you run payroll — whether weekly, fortnightly, or monthly — a super payment must follow within seven business days. The ATO will have real-time data on whether contributions have been made on time through Single Touch Payroll reporting, making non-compliance much easier to detect than under the old system.
The new system also changes how the Superannuation Guarantee Charge works for late payments. The revised charge is designed to be more punitive than before, removing the incentive some employers had to delay payments and simply pay the charge instead. Getting compliant from day one is the right approach.
The most important first step is confirming that your payroll software is ready for Payday Super. Most of the major Australian payroll platforms — including Xero Payroll and MYOB — have been working on updates to support the new rules. Log in to your provider’s portal or contact their support team to confirm their Payday Super functionality is in place and that your system is configured correctly. Do not assume the software will handle everything automatically — verify it.
Paying super on payday rather than quarterly has a real cash flow impact, particularly for businesses that have been accustomed to holding that money for up to three months. A business with a $100,000 monthly wage bill at 12% super has been deferring roughly $36,000 per quarter. Under Payday Super, those funds need to leave your account much sooner. Review your working capital position now to ensure you can comfortably meet the new payment cadence from July without disrupting your operating cash flow.
Take the time before July to confirm that you have valid superannuation fund details for all employees — including the correct fund name, ABN, and unique superannuation identifier. Review any employees who have not provided fund details and may be defaulting to your nominated default fund. Where employees are in the process of consolidating super accounts, confirm where contributions should be directed before the new system goes live.
In summary: confirm your payroll software is Payday Super ready, review your cash flow and working capital, update employee fund details, check that your bank accounts are set up for faster super payments, and brief your bookkeeper or payroll manager on the new requirements. The transition will be smoother for businesses that prepare now rather than scrambling after 1 July.
Payday Super is a significant compliance change with real cash flow implications. If you would like help reviewing your payroll setup or understanding your obligations under the new rules, contact us now — there is limited time before 1 July.