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What Recent Payroll and Super Changes Mean for Australian Employers

What Recent Payroll and Super Changes Mean for Australian Employers

Recent changes to payroll obligations, superannuation, STP and pay day super are increasing the pressure on Australian employers to get payroll right. Here is what small business owners need to know to stay compliant and avoid costly errors.

Vedran Maric
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Australian employers are facing a more demanding compliance environment than ever before. Payroll obligations now sit under closer scrutiny from the ATO, Fair Work, and superannuation regulators, and the cost of getting things wrong can be significant. Even small errors in wages, superannuation, leave loading, or reporting can lead to penalties, employee disputes, and cash flow strain.

For small business owners, the biggest challenge is that payroll is no longer just an administrative task. It is a compliance function that affects tax, superannuation, employee trust, and business performance. With single touch payroll, tighter super rules, and the move towards pay day super, employers need systems and advice that keep pace with the law.

How the latest payroll obligations affect employer compliance

Payroll obligations in Australia now extend well beyond paying staff on time. Employers must correctly calculate wages, overtime, allowances, leave, PAYG withholding, superannuation, and report through single touch payroll to the ATO each pay cycle. If your records are incomplete or your software is not configured properly, your business can quickly fall out of compliance.

The ATO has increased its focus on data matching and real time reporting, which means payroll mistakes are easier to detect. For example, if an employee is paid $1,500 a week and their ordinary time earnings are not calculated correctly, the super guarantee amount may be understated. At the current super guarantee rate of 11.5 per cent from 1 July 2024, a shortfall can add up fast across a team.

Employer compliance also means meeting Fair Work obligations. That includes paying at least the correct award rate, applying penalty rates where required, and keeping accurate records for seven years. If your business has casuals, part time staff, or multiple award covered roles, your payroll process needs regular review. A compliant payroll system reduces the risk of back payments, ATO interest, and reputational damage.

What employers need to know about superannuation and pay day super

Superannuation remains one of the most important payroll obligations for employers. Under current rules, eligible employees must receive super guarantee contributions based on ordinary time earnings, paid at least quarterly. The standard rate is 11.5 per cent for the 2024 to 2025 year, increasing to 12 per cent from 1 July 2025. Missing a deadline, paying the wrong amount, or using the wrong earnings base can trigger the super guarantee charge, which is more expensive than simply paying on time.

The proposed pay day super regime will make timing even more important. Instead of quarterly super payments, employers will be required to pay super at the same time as wages. This change is designed to improve retirement outcomes for employees and reduce unpaid super, but it will also place more pressure on cash flow, payroll processes, and reconciliations.

For small businesses, this means planning ahead now. If your business currently pays super quarterly, you will need to understand how pay day super affects your working capital, software, and approvals process. For example, a business with 15 staff paid fortnightly may need to shift from making four super payments a year to making 26 or 27 smaller payments. That changes the timing of cash outflows and requires stronger controls.

Employers should also check that super is paid into the correct fund, within the correct timeframe, and for all eligible workers, including some contractors who are treated as employees for super purposes. Getting advice early can prevent costly corrections later.

How single touch payroll and STP reporting are changing payroll processes

Single touch payroll, often called STP, has changed how employers report wages and tax information to the ATO. Instead of lodging payroll information once a year, businesses now report through STP each time employees are paid. This gives the ATO near real time visibility over salary, wages, PAYG withholding, and super related data.

For employers, STP reporting means payroll processes must be accurate before each pay run is finalised. If an employee is paid incorrectly, the mistake is reflected in the ATO system quickly. That makes timely review and correction essential. STP Phase 2 has also expanded the amount of information reported, including more detailed breakdowns of income types and allowances.

This change can be a real advantage when payroll is managed well. It supports cleaner year end reporting, reduces manual payment summaries, and helps businesses keep records aligned with tax obligations. But it also means that poor payroll data, outdated employee settings, or incorrect tax file number declarations can create problems across the whole reporting cycle.

A practical example is a hospitality business with casual staff, overtime, and multiple allowance types. If awards are not mapped correctly in payroll software, the STP report may not reflect the true nature of payments. That can affect employee income statements and create follow up work at year end. Businesses should review payroll settings regularly and make sure staff who process payroll understand both the software and the compliance rules behind it.

Key steps to stay compliant with updated payroll and superannuation rules

The best way to manage changing payroll obligations is to build a system that is accurate, documented, and reviewed often. Start by checking that every employee has a current employment contract, tax file number declaration, and super choice form where required. Next, confirm that payroll software is set up with the correct award rates, leave entitlements, super settings, and STP reporting fields.

Reconciliation is critical. Each pay run should be checked against timesheets, leave approvals, and super calculations before payment is made. Monthly or quarterly reviews should also compare payroll reports to general ledger accounts, BAS obligations, and super payments made to funds. If your payroll reports show $80,000 in gross wages for the month, but your bank payments and super contributions do not match, that needs immediate investigation.

It is also wise to create a calendar for key dates, including pay runs, super due dates, BAS lodgements, and STP finalisation. Many businesses fall behind because payroll is managed reactively rather than through a structured process. A monthly retainer model with proactive accounting support can help business owners stay ahead of deadlines and avoid last minute stress.

Training matters too. The person processing payroll should understand the minimum wage, award interpretation, PAYG withholding, super guarantee, and record keeping obligations. If payroll is outsourced, ask for regular reporting and error checks. Compliance is not just about software, it is about having the right controls and oversight in place.

What these changes mean for payroll obligations in Australian businesses

For Australian businesses, the direction of travel is clear. Payroll obligations are becoming more detailed, more frequent, and more closely monitored by regulators. Single touch payroll has already changed how information is reported, and pay day super will likely make superannuation management even more time sensitive. Employers who rely on outdated processes will find compliance harder and more expensive.

This is especially important for small and medium businesses with turnover between $500,000 and $10 million, where payroll often sits with a bookkeeper, office manager, or owner operator. When one person is juggling wages, super, BAS, and cash flow, mistakes can happen quickly. The solution is not more admin, it is better systems, clearer advice, and regular review.

Businesses that act early can turn compliance into an advantage. Accurate payroll supports employee trust, reduces ATO risk, improves forecasting, and gives owners better visibility over labour costs. If your payroll is not being reviewed against current ATO and Fair Work requirements, now is the time to act.

If you want practical support with payroll obligations, superannuation, STP, and employer compliance, book a discovery call with BVM Accountants & Business Consultants. We help Australian business owners put the right systems in place so payroll runs smoothly, super is paid correctly, and compliance does not become a costly distraction.

Payroll obligationsSuperannuationSTPEmployer compliancePay day super

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Frequently Asked Questions

What are the main payroll obligations for Australian employers?+

Employers must pay staff correctly under the relevant award or agreement, withhold PAYG tax, pay superannuation on time, report through single touch payroll, and keep accurate records for at least seven years.

What is pay day super and when will it start?+

Pay day super is a proposed change that would require employers to pay superannuation at the same time as wages. It is designed to improve compliance and reduce unpaid super, but employers should prepare now because it will affect cash flow and payroll processes.

How does STP reporting affect my payroll process?+

Single touch payroll requires employers to report wages, tax withheld, and related payroll information to the ATO each time staff are paid. This means payroll data must be accurate before every pay run and errors should be corrected quickly.

What happens if I pay super late?+

If super is paid late, you may have to lodge a super guarantee charge statement and pay the super guarantee charge, which can include interest and administration costs. Late payment is usually more expensive than paying on time.

How can a small business stay compliant with payroll obligations?+

A small business can stay compliant by using correctly set up payroll software, reconciling payroll regularly, checking award rates and super calculations, tracking key due dates, and seeking professional advice before issues become penalties.

Need Help With This?

Our CPA-qualified team can provide tailored advice for your specific situation. We work with over 100 small businesses across Sydney.

This information is general in nature. It does not constitute professional advice tailored to your specific circumstances. Tax laws change frequently and individual situations vary. We recommend consulting with a qualified accountant before making financial decisions based on this information. BVM Accountants & Business Consultants, Oran Park NSW 2570.