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Super 12% from July 2025: what the milestone means for retirement

Numbers updated… · sources
TL;DR

On 1 July 2025, the Superannuation Guarantee (SG) - the mandatory super contribution your employer makes - rose to 12% of ordinary time earnings. This is the final step in a phased increase from 9.5% in 2020. For a $80K employee, that's now $9,600/year in super (vs $7,600 at the old 9.5% rate). Over 30 years of compounding at 7% real return, the extra 2.5pp contribution adds roughly $200,000 to your retirement balance. The 12% rate is now legislated as the final SG level - no further increases scheduled.

The path from 9.5% to 12%

The Superannuation Guarantee has been increasing in 0.5pp steps:

• 1 July 2014 - 30 June 2021: 9.5% (paused during the slow recovery) • 1 July 2021: 10.0% • 1 July 2022: 10.5% • 1 July 2023: 11.0%: 11.5%: 12.0% (FINAL legislated step)

The original Howard-era plan capped SG at 9%; Rudd raised the target to 12%. Coalition governments paused increases multiple times; the Albanese government kept the 2025 milestone intact.

How it shows up in your pay: SG is paid on top of your base salary (for most employment contracts). If your salary is "$80,000 plus super," your super went from $7,600 (9.5%) to $9,600 (12%) over the 5-year transition. If your contract is "$80,000 inclusive of super," your take-home pay actually dropped slightly each year as more of the package was diverted to super.

What 12% means in dollars

Annual SG contribution by salary (12% rate, 2026): • $50,000: $6,000 • $70,000: $8,400 • $90,000: $10,800 • $120,000: $14,400 • $150,000: $18,000 • $200,000: $24,000 • $250,000: capped at $30,000 (the MSCB - Maximum Superannuation Contribution Base - is $73,030/quarter in 2025-26, which works out to ~$292K/yr; over that, SG isn't compulsory)

Compare to 2020 (9.5% rate): a $90,000 employee got $8,550/yr in 2020 super, now gets $10,800. That's an extra $2,250/year compounding inside super.

Concessional cap interaction: total concessional contributions (SG + salary sacrifice + personal deductible) are capped at $30,000/year in 2025-26 (up from $27,500). A $200K employee already gets $24K in SG - leaves only $6K of cap for additional sacrifice. Higher earners are increasingly cap-constrained.

Superannuation Guarantee phase-in to 12%
Effective dateSG rateAnnual SG on $90K
1 July 2014 - 30 June 20219.5%$8,550
1 July 202110.0%$9,000
1 July 202210.5%$9,450
1 July 202311.0%$9,900
11.5%$10,350
(final)12.0%$10,800
Annual SG by salary at the new 12% rate
SalarySG @ 12%Extra vs 9.5%
$50,000$6,000+$1,250
$70,000$8,400+$1,750
$90,000$10,800+$2,250
$120,000$14,400+$3,000
$150,000$18,000+$3,750
$200,000$24,000+$5,000
$292,000 (MSCB)$35,040+$7,300

The compound effect: $200K extra by age 60

The real value of the SG increase shows up over decades.

Scenario: 30-year-old earning $80,000, retires at 60

Under old 9.5% rate: • Annual SG: $7,600 • 30 years of $7,600 + 5% real wage growth + 7% real super return • Balance at 60: ~$680,000 (today's dollars)

Under new 12% rate: • Annual SG: $9,600 • Same growth + return assumptions • Balance at 60: ~$885,000 (today's dollars)

Extra balance from SG increase alone: ~$205,000 at retirement.

What does $205K extra mean in retirement income? Using the 4% safe withdrawal rate, that's an extra $8,200/year of inflation-adjusted income for 30 years - the difference between a comfortable retirement and a financially-stretched one.

For younger workers (under 25): even more compounding. A 23-year-old on $60K could see $280K-$350K more at age 60.

For older workers (50+): less time for compounding. A 50-year-old on $90K might get an extra $30-$45K by 60 - still meaningful but not transformative.

Retirement balance at 60 (30-year-old today, 7% real return)
$60K salary, 12% SG
$663K
$60K salary, 9.5% SG
$525K
$80K salary, 12% SG
$885K
$80K salary, 9.5% SG
$700K
$120K salary, 12% SG
$1.33M
$120K salary, 9.5% SG
$1.05M

Self-employed: do you need to pay yourself 12%?

Short answer: no. The SG only applies if you're an employee. If you're a sole trader (ABN, no company), you have no legal requirement to contribute super at all.

But you should. Self-employed Australians have ~25% lower super balances at retirement than employees, even at the same income levels. The fix: voluntary concessional contributions.

Tax math for self-employed concessional contribution: • Contribute $10,000 to super • Claim deduction on tax return • Saved tax at marginal rate (e.g. 37% = $3,700) • Super contributions tax: 15% × $10,000 = $1,500 • Net benefit: $3,700 - $1,500 = $2,200 in your pocket for $10K parked in super

Use a registered super fund or your own SMSF. Submit a "Notice of Intent to Claim a Deduction" form to your super fund before lodging your tax return.

Sole trader running through a company: if you're an employee of your own Pty Ltd company drawing a wage, the company MUST pay you 12% SG. Many small business owners take dividends instead of wages to skip SG - this is legal but reduces your retirement balance.

What's next: division 296 and the $3M cap

The 12% SG is the final rate increase, but super policy is not standing still. The biggest upcoming change is Division 296 - colloquially "the $3M cap" or "Treasury's big-balance super tax."

Division 296 details (legislation passed late 2024, effective 1 July 2025): • Applies to total super balances above $3 million • Additional 15% tax on earnings attributable to the portion above $3M • Brings total effective tax on those earnings to 30% (existing 15% + new 15%)

Who's affected: roughly 80,000 Australians (top ~0.5% of super balances). Most under-50 workers will never hit $3M - but for high earners with SMSFs, this is a major planning event.

Controversial element: unrealised gains are taxable under Div 296. So a property in your SMSF that rose in value (but hasn't been sold) triggers tax - a first for Australian tax policy. Many planners are advising clients to crystallise capital gains before 1 July 2025 and rebalance to smaller balances.

What about you (sub-$3M): nothing changes. Your SG, voluntary contributions, and earnings tax all stay at existing rates.

Run the math for your situation

Use our 🇦🇺 Australia calculator to plug in your own numbers.

Frequently asked questions

Quick answers people search for.

What is the current Australian super guarantee rate?

12% of ordinary time earnings (OTE), effective 1 July 2025. This is the final legislated rate - no further scheduled increases.

Do I get 12% on overtime pay?

Generally no - SG is paid on Ordinary Time Earnings (OTE), which usually excludes overtime. Allowances and bonuses are mixed - some count, some don't. Check your payslip and the OTE definition with your employer.

How much super will I have at retirement with 12% SG?

Depends on salary, age, and returns. A 30-year-old on $80K can expect roughly $885K (today's dollars) at age 60 under 12% SG - about $200K more than under the old 9.5%.

Does the 12% increase apply if I'm self-employed?

No - the SG only applies to employees. Self-employed Australians have no SG obligation but can make voluntary deductible contributions to save on tax and build a retirement balance.

What is Division 296 / the $3M super cap?

A new 15% extra tax (on top of existing 15%) on earnings attributable to super balances over $3 million. Effective 1 July 2025. Affects about 80,000 Australians with very large balances.