Something is changing on 1 July that affects every small business in Australia with employees.
It is called Payday Super. And if you currently pay your team's super quarterly, your process is about to change.
This is not complicated. But it does matter. Here is what you need to know.
Right now, most employers pay super contributions quarterly. Four times a year, you calculate what you owe, and you pay it.
From 1 July 2026, that changes. Super must be paid on every single payday. Not quarterly. Every pay run.
That means if you pay your team weekly, super gets paid weekly. Fortnightly pay runs? Super goes out fortnightly. The payment moves with the payday.
The government wants employees to receive their super consistently and on time. Delayed super payments have been a problem for workers, especially in industries with high staff turnover. Payday Super fixes that by tying the super payment directly to the pay run.
It is a good change for workers. For employers, it means your process needs to keep up.
If you are running a manual process right now, spreadsheets, a basic system, or doing payday from memory, Payday Super adds real pressure.
Here is why. Quarterly super was forgiving. You had time to check your numbers, fix mistakes, and catch up if something went wrong.
With super tied to every pay run, you have less room to move. Each payday needs to be right. Super calculations need to happen automatically, not as a separate job you do later.
For small businesses with 1 to 15 staff, that is a meaningful shift. You are already stretched. Payday is already one more thing on a long list. Adding a weekly or fortnightly super payment on top of a manual process is going to feel heavy.
With super tied to every pay run, each payday needs to be right. Super calculations need to happen automatically, not as a separate job you do later."
If your current payroll process is slow, manual, or involves switching between systems, it is going to get harder after 1 July 2026.
Not impossible. Just harder. More steps. More chances for mistakes. More time spent on something that should take minutes.
The businesses that will feel this least are the ones that have payday running cleanly through one simple process.
Ready means super is calculated and paid as part of the pay run. Not as a separate job. Not something you do later.
It means you enter hours, approve pay, and everything goes out together. Staff paid. Super handled. Done.
That is what Payday Super requires. And honestly, that is what good payday practice looks like anyway.
Yes. PaySauce calculates and pays super as part of every pay run. When you run payday, super is included. You do not need to track it separately or make a separate payment.
For small businesses that are moving off spreadsheets or a manual process, that is the clearest reason to switch before 1 July.
Take a look at how you currently run payday. If it involves multiple steps, separate systems, or anything that takes more than a few minutes, now is a good time to simplify.
Payday Super comes into effect 1 July. That is your deadline.
Get set up before then and your first Payday Super pay run will feel like any other payday. Leave it too late and you will be changing your process under pressure.