What is Payday Super?
Payday Super is a major change to Australia's superannuation system taking effect on July 1, 2026. From this date, employers must pay superannuation contributions at the same time as wages - whether that's weekly, fortnightly or monthly.
Previously, businesses were required to pay super quarterly. Under Payday Super, a business that pays wages weekly must also pay super weekly. This fundamentally changes the cash flow requirements of any business with employees.
⚡ A business paying $15,000 per week in wages will owe $1,800 in superannuation - every single week - from July 1, 2026.
How does Payday Super affect cash flow?
The shift from quarterly to payday super means businesses need to have super funds available at the time of each pay run - not 3 months later. For many small businesses, this represents a significant change to working capital requirements.
- Weekly payers - must have super ready every 7 days instead of every 90 days
- Fortnightly payers - must have super ready every 14 days
- Monthly payers - must have super ready every 30 days instead of every 90 days
- Penalties - late super payments attract the Super Guarantee Charge (SGC) which includes penalties and interest
The most practical Payday Super cash flow solution
A business overdraft is the most practical buffer for Payday Super. Unlike a term loan, an overdraft sits in the background and is only drawn on when needed. You only pay interest on what you use.
✓ Set up your overdraft now - before July 1 - so it's ready the moment you need it. Approval takes as little as 1 hour. Don't wait until July.
Why act before July 1?
- Lender assessment is based on recent bank statements - apply while your cash flow looks healthy
- Approval and setup takes 24–48 hours minimum - don't leave it to the last minute
- The facility sits unused until you need it - there's no cost to having it in place
- Interest is only charged on drawn balances - not the full facility limit
Payday Super eligibility and penalties
All employers who pay super for their employees will be subject to Payday Super from July 1, 2026. The 12% superannuation guarantee rate applies to ordinary time earnings.
Employers who fail to pay super on time under Payday Super will be subject to the Super Guarantee Charge (SGC), which includes the unpaid super amount, an interest component and an administration fee. The ATO will have enhanced visibility of super payment timing through improved data matching with super funds.