Editor: The Federal Government handed down the Federal Budget on 12 May 2026, with some of the biggest changes to the tax system in years.
Some of the main proposed changes include:
Some of the other proposed Budget changes affecting businesses include:
The ATO is providing information that employers need to know to manage the changeover from quarterly super to Payday Super from 1 July 2026 (i.e., when employers will begin paying super with each payday under the Payday Super changes).
During July 2026, employers may need to manage more than one super payment, including:
If employers do not finalise their June quarter payments by 28 July 2026 (or earlier):
Also, from 1 July 2026, employers calculate, pay and report super guarantee for their employees (including eligible contractors) under the Payday Super rules. This includes ensuring the money is in their employees' super accounts generally within 7 business days after payday.
Note that superannuation for pay runs in July may be due before their final quarterly super payment is due on 28 July, but contributions received on or before 28 July will reduce any super owing for the June quarter first. If there is any remainder, contributions will then be used under Payday Super.
However, the ATO assures employers that pay on time for quarterly and Payday Super that they will not risk incurring penalties.
The Small Business Superannuation Clearing House ('SBSCH') will permanently close on 1 July 2026. Therefore, employers still using it have less than a month to transition to an alternative service provider, test their new arrangements and resolve any issues before Payday Super begins.
The ATO recommends that affected employers act now to:
The ATO is warning the community to be wary of incorrect or misleading information this Tax Time, particularly claims promising greater refunds, shortcuts or hacks.
The ATO is seeing a rise in tax-related content and 'tips' being shared — especially online — and is urging taxpayers to treat unverified advice with caution.
Australians should think twice before acting on information from third-party sources such as artificial intelligence ('AI') platforms, 'finfluencers', or advice from family or friends. Although the ATO acknowledges that AI can be helpful, it can lead to inaccurate advice: "Your tax return isn't the place for guesswork."
The ATO also revealed that, this Tax Time, it will be focusing on areas where taxpayers are likely to make errors, including work-related deductions and expenses (and properly apportioning such expenses), and omitted income (including from 'side-hustles', cash jobs, and rental income).
The ATO has released updated guidance to clarify how it assesses rental property income and expenses, to reflect changes in the way investors rent out their properties.
This is particularly important for clients whose rental property also doubles as a holiday home.
If a rental property that doubles as a holiday home is not used primarily to earn assessable income, taxpayers won't be able to claim deductions, including for ownership or use expenses (such as interest expenses, council and water rates, body corporate fees, and capital works and depreciation).
Only expenses such as advertising costs, cleaning costs after a guest stay, and booking fees and commissions will be deductible.
If the holiday home is used mainly to produce income, but there's a small portion of private use (e.g., a week or a few weekends in the off-season where there was no booking, or very low chance of a booking), then taxpayers may claim a deduction (although the expenses must be apportioned, and they cannot claim for the period of private use).
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