Australia has legislated a major shift to how superannuation must be paid: from 1 July 2026, employers must pay Superannuation Guarantee (SG) on payday rather than quarterly.
The Treasury Laws Amendment (Payday Superannuation) Act 2025 is now in force and ties commencement to 1 July 2026, replacing the quarterly framework in the Superannuation Guarantee (Administration) Act 1992. [legislation.gov.au], [ato.gov.au] [legislation.gov.au]

Under the reforms, SG contributions must be received by the employee’s fund within 7 business days of payday, a move intended to curb unpaid super and improve retirement outcomes via earlier compounding.
The base for calculating SG also shifts to qualifying earnings (QE)—a new term that consolidates ordinary time earnings with certain other amounts—while the SG rate remains 12%. [treasury.gov.au], [ato.gov.au] [ato.gov.au]

The Superannuation Guarantee Charge (SGC) framework has been redesigned to suit payday frequency, with a new administrative uplift that can default to 60% of the shortfall (subject to reductions for good compliance history and prompt voluntary disclosure).
This replaces the old flat administration fee and heightens the cost of late payments where issues aren’t identified and fixed early. There are practical timing exceptions, including an extended window for the first contribution for new employees (up to 20 business days), recognising onboarding realities and system cutovers.
Super funds must also allocate or reject contributions within 3 business days, streamlining flows so money reaches members faster; these details sit in the 2026 regulations supporting the Act. [fairwork.gov.au], [superannua…ion.asn.au]

Importantly, the ATO’s Small Business Superannuation Clearing House (SBSCH) will be retired from 1 July 2026 (closed to new users since 1 October 2025), so employers should transition to alternative clearing arrangements well before go‑live.
The government and regulators expect the shift to make non‑payment visible earlier by matching Single Touch Payroll data with fund reporting. [csc.gov.au]

To smooth implementation, the ATO has signalled a first‑year, risk‑based compliance approach (PCG 2026/1), focusing enforcement on high‑risk non‑payers while recognising employers making genuine efforts to comply.
Employers can access ATO checklists and fact sheets on QE, SuperStream updates and SBSCH transition to prepare and test processes ahead of July 2026. [ato.gov.au] [ato.gov.au]

For payroll, finance and HR, the implications are immediate: upgrade systems to calculate SG on every pay run, ensure remittances clear to funds within 7 business days, and adjust cash‑flow to reflect more frequent outflows.
You should also review STP configurations to report QE and liabilities accurately, verify fund details to reduce rejects, and update governance and controls to detect variances quickly. [ato.gov.au], [csc.gov.au] [ato.gov.au], [csc.gov.au]

The policy rationale is clear: billions in unpaid or late super each year undermine retirement balances, especially for vulnerable workers; paying super at the same time as wages tackles this gap and boosts compounding sooner. [ministers….ury.gov.au].