Running a café, restaurant or bar means you already know payday is complicated.
Casual staff. Split shifts. Weekend penalty rates. Someone who worked three different roles across the week. A roster that changed twice on Saturday.
Payday in hospitality is never simple.
From 1 July, it gets a layer more important to get right.
Payday Super means super contributions are paid on every payday. Not quarterly. Not in a batch at the end of the quarter.
Every pay run. Every time.
If you are paying your team weekly, super goes out weekly. Fortnightly? Fortnightly super payments. The super moves with the payday.
The Hospitality Award is one of the most complex in Australia. Weekend rates, evening loadings, public holiday pay, casual versus part-time conditions. Getting payday right already requires focus.
Most hospitality operators have been paying super quarterly because that is the rhythm they know. Quarterly super was forgiving. You had time to check, adjust, and catch up.
With super tied to every pay run, that buffer is gone. Each payday needs to be right. Super needs to be calculated correctly on the day, for every staff member, every shift.
For a café owner running eight casual staff across different shift patterns, that is not a small ask.
"With super tied to every pay run, that buffer is gone. Each payday needs to be right."
Most hospitality owners know this moment.
The last table has gone. The floor is mopped. It is 11pm and you still need to do payday.
You are checking hours against the roster. Calculating loadings. Making sure everyone got the right rate for that Sunday double. Then logging into banking to process payments.
That has always been a lot. After 1 July, you need super going out at the same time.
If the process is manual, it gets heavier.
If your current setup involves spreadsheets, manual calculations, or separate steps for payments and super, that process is going to feel the pressure.
Not because super is hard to calculate. But because doing it manually, every single week, for staff with variable hours and multiple rates, adds up fast.
One mistake in a quarterly super run is annoying. One mistake every week is a pattern.
You enter hours. You see pay calculated correctly, including all the award conditions. You approve it. Staff are paid and super goes out as part of the same run.
That is it. No separate steps. No logging into banking twice. No catching up on super later.
PaySauce does this. It handles Hospitality Award rates, calculates super automatically with each pay run, and runs from your phone. Because you are not running payroll from a desktop in an office. You are doing it between service, in the back, on your phone.
The best thing PaySauce customers say is not that it saved them hours. It is that they stopped thinking about it.
Payday just happens. Correctly. Every time.
That is what Payday Super is asking you to build toward. A process you can trust, every single week.
If you sort your payday process now, 1 July will feel like any other pay run.
If you are still figuring it out in June, you are making changes while also running payday for real.
Get ahead of it.