As we approach the end of the financial year, it is important for investors to keep their finger on the pulse of changing regulations and legislation that will impact their investments.

Below, you can find a list of the changes that are coming into effect on 1 July 2026, who will be impacted and any considerations for your portfolio review. This new financial year is shaping up to be a significant one – particularly when it comes to superannuation.

Some of these changes will create new opportunities to contribute more to super or move more money into retirement phase. Others, particularly the new tax on larger balances, will change the way wealthier Australians approach retirement planning.

Payday super begins

One of the biggest operational changes to Australia’s super system arrives on 1 July 2026 with the introduction of ‘Payday Super’.

Currently, employers only need to pay super contributions quarterly. From 1 July 2026, employers will generally need to pay super at the same time as wages, with contributions required to reach employees’ super funds within seven business days.

The change is designed to reduce unpaid super and help workers receive their super earlier so it can remain invested for longer.

This seemingly subtle change can make a difference over the long-term as earlier super contributions compound. For an employee getting paid $100,000, with $12,000 going into superannuation each year as employer contributions, this can be significant. It means that $2,500 (post-tax) is not held by the employer for three months and instead gets invested early.

For businesses, particularly small businesses, this will likely require changes to payroll systems and cash flow management. The ATO’s Small Business Superannuation Clearing House is also closing from 1 July 2026, meaning employers relying on the free service will need alternative arrangements.

Contribution caps are increasing

From 1 July 2026, the concessional contribution cap in superannuation will increase from $30,000 to $32,500. The non-concessional contribution cap will increase from $120,000 to $130,000.

This creates additional opportunities for Australians looking to build wealth tax-effectively through super.

Those with unused concessional cap amounts from prior years may also be able to use carry-forward contributions if eligible.

For after-tax contributions, the increase in the non-concessional cap also increases the bring-forward amount. Eligible Australians under the bring-forward rules may potentially contribute up to $390,000 over three years.

The transfer balance cap is increasing

The transfer balance cap is the amount that can be moved into the tax-free retirement pension phase. This will increase from $2 million to $2.1 million from 1 July 2026.

This means Australians starting a retirement pension for the first time after 1 July 2026 may be able to move an additional $100,000 into the tax-free environment.

The increase may also create proportional indexation benefits for people who have previously started retirement income streams but have not fully used their personal transfer balance cap. For example, Priscilla started an account-based pension when the transfer balance cap was $1.9 million. They started a pension with $950,000 and used 50% of their transfer balance cap. They still have 50% to use.

The transfer balance cap will be $2.1 million, an increase of $200,000 from the original transfer balance cap of $1.9 million. Priscilla has 50% unused, which is $100,000 of the $200,000 cap. This increases her unused proportion from $950,000 to $1.05 million.

For retirees and those approaching retirement, timing may matter. In some cases, delaying the commencement of a pension until after 1 July could allow a larger amount to enter the tax-free retirement phase.

Division 296 tax begins

One of the most controversial changes commencing from 1 July 2026 is the introduction of Division 296. This is the additional tax on large super balances.

The new rules stipulate:

  • Earnings attributable to super balances above $3 million will face an additional 15% tax
  • This effectively increases the tax rate on those earnings from 15% to 30%
  • A higher tier may apply to balances above $10 million under the final legislation

While only a relatively small percentage of Australians are directly affected today, the change is significant because it alters one of the longstanding assumptions underpinning Australia’s superannuation system: that super earnings would continue to receive concessional tax treatment regardless of balance size. Without any indexation stipulated, more and more Australians will be impacted by this additional tax as time moves on.

The change may also influence investment decisions inside super, estate planning strategies and decisions about whether future wealth accumulation occurs inside or outside the super system.

Super on paid parental leave expands

From 1 July 2026, eligible parents receiving government-funded Paid Parental Leave will begin receiving super contributions on those payments.

Historically, one of the structural challenges in Australia’s retirement system has been lower super balances for women, partly due to career breaks and time spent out of the workforce caring for children.

The introduction of super on Paid Parental Leave is designed to help reduce this gap over time.

Government thresholds and limits are changing

A number of super-related thresholds are also increasing through indexation. These include:

While these changes may not attract the same attention as larger reforms, they can create planning opportunities, particularly for Australians managing contribution strategies across multiple financial years.

Why these changes matter for investors

The 1 July 2026 changes encourage more money into super earlier, while simultaneously tightening concessions for very large balances.

For younger Australians, the biggest long-term impact may come from Payday Super and higher contribution caps. Small changes in timing and contribution amounts can compound meaningfully over decades.

For older Australians and retirees, the focus is more likely to be on pension phase caps, contribution opportunities and navigating the new tax settings for larger balances.

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