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Sewwandi(Newbie)Newbie
16 Mar 2026

We are considering commencing payday super earlier, around May, and plan to start paying superannuation weekly so we can ensure everything runs smoothly before the 1 July 2026 requirement.

Our current practice is to pay super monthly in arrears. Therefore, the June 2025 super was paid in July 2025 and therefore became the first contribution recorded for the 2025–26 financial year.

If we begin paying super weekly from June 2026, the June 2026 contributions will also fall within the same financial year. This could potentially result in employees having 13 months of contributions recorded in one financial year instead of 12 for this financial year.

Could you please clarify whether this may create any issues, particularly for employees who are close to the Concessional Contributions Cap of $30,000? We are concerned that the timing change could cause some employees to exceed the cap and potentially incur additional tax.

Any assistance on how this situation should be managed would be greatly appreciated.

190 views
5 replies
190 views
5 replies

All replies

Bruce4Tax(Taxicorn)Taxicorn
16 Mar 2026

If we begin paying super weekly from June 2026, the June 2026 contributions will also fall within the same financial year.


Does not start till 01/07/2026.


PayrollDeanne(Taxicorn)Taxicorn
16 Mar 2026

Paying super more frequently in the lead up to Payday Super is what the ATO is recommending to assist business readiness. Yes, July 2026 will see the transition of current to Payday Super. The government are considering options about the adverse impact on concessional caps at transition 😉 Deanne

KaraATO(Community Support)Community Support
17 Mar 2026

Hi @Sewwandi,


If an employee receives or puts more money into their super than the concessional contributions cap (which is currently $30,000 for 2025-26 financial year), the extra amount is called excess concessional contributions (ECC).


When this happens:

  • The extra amount is added to the employee’s taxable income.
  • They pay tax on it at their normal tax rate, but they also receive a 15% tax offset because the contributions have already been taxed in the fund.
  • The employee can choose to take up to 85% of these extra contributions out of their super to help pay the extra tax.

At the moment, there are no changes to how this process will work for the 2025-26 financial year.


The government announced that for the 2026-27 financial year, it plans to introduce some technical changes as part of the move to Payday Super. These changes are intended to help make sure people don’t go over their concessional cap just because they may have more super payments in that year.


As these changes aren’t law yet, I'd recommend regularly checking our web content for updates.

amym(Initiate)Initiate
23 Mar 2026

Hi. Is there a timeframe of when the ATO will release information regarding any transition arrangements for concessional caps 2025/2026. We are also looking to commence Payday Super from mid April 2026. Is an alternative for April/May 2026 processed as Payday Super and June 2026 revert back to monthly in arrears to stay within the concessional caps? Thanks Amy

KaraATO(Community Support)Community Support
27 Mar 2026

Hi @amym,


We’ll update our website with more info once this becomes law. The timing depends on the government legislative process, so we can’t confirm a date yet. For now, the best place to check for updates is our ATO website.

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