Superannuation Calculator Australia 2026 — Balance, Contributions and Retirement Projections

Superannuation is Australia’s compulsory retirement savings system. With the Super Guarantee rate at 11.5% in 2024-25 (rising to 12% from 1 July 2025), your employer is required to contribute a significant chunk of your salary to super. Here’s how to calculate where you’ll end up.

Super Guarantee 2024-25
11.5%
From 1 July 2025
12.0%
Concessional cap 2024-25
$30k

Super Balance Projections by Age — 2026

Current AgeSalary $80kSalary $120kSalary $180k
Age 30$490k at 67$735k at 67$1.1M at 67
Age 40$270k at 67$405k at 67$607k at 67
Age 50$130k at 67$196k at 67$294k at 67

*Estimates only. Assumes 7% p.a. investment return, 0% starting balance, contributions from today.

Tax on Super — 2025–26

  • Employer contributions (concessional) — taxed at 15% inside super (not your marginal rate)
  • Investment earnings inside super — taxed at 15% (7.5% with CGT discount for assets held 12+ months)
  • Withdrawals in retirement (after 60) — tax-free from taxed funds
  • Concessional cap — $30,000 per year (2024-25). Contributions over this are taxed at marginal rate
  • Non-concessional cap — $120,000 per year after-tax contributions

How to Boost Your Super Balance

  • Salary sacrifice — contribute pre-tax dollars into super up to the $30k concessional cap. High income earners save significantly as contributions are taxed at 15% vs their 37-45% marginal rate
  • Government co-contribution — for income under $58,445, the government will match after-tax contributions up to $500 per year
  • Spouse contributions — contributions to a low-income spouse’s super may attract an 18% tax offset
  • Investment option — switching from a balanced to a growth option for long-term investors can significantly improve returns over a 30-year period
  • Consolidate funds — multiple super accounts mean multiple sets of fees. Find and merge lost super via the ATO

Calculate Your Take-Home Pay

See how salary sacrificing into super affects your take-home pay.

Use Free Calculator →

Disclaimer: General information only. Not financial advice. Always consult a licensed professional before making financial decisions.

Leave a Comment