The quarterly super cycle is ending. From 1 July 2026, you'll pay your employees' super at the same time as their wages, and the cashflow buffer that timing gap quietly created is gone with it.
For most Australian SMEs, this won't feel like a compliance update. It'll feel like a working capital hit, hitting hardest in the first month of the new financial year. If you haven't modelled what July looks like for your business yet, that's the work to do before 30 June 2026.
What's actually changing on 1 July 2026
The Treasury Laws Amendment (Payday Superannuation) Act 2025 is now law. From 1 July 2026, the Superannuation Guarantee (12% of qualifying earnings) must reach each employee's super fund within 7 business days of payday. That replaces the quarterly cycle most businesses have used for decades.
Three things change at once on the same date:
- Super is paid every pay run, not once a quarter
- The Small Business Superannuation Clearing House (SBSCH) closes permanently on 30 June 2026
- Single Touch Payroll reporting picks up new per-pay-event super liability data
The ATO has released PCG 2026/1 setting out a risk-based compliance approach for the first 12 months, but there's no formal exemption for small business. Late payments trigger the Superannuation Guarantee Charge, which isn't tax-deductible and can carry penalties of up to 50% of the unpaid amount for repeat issues.
Why July 2026 is the hardest single month
Here's the part most operators haven't sat down and modelled. The final quarterly super payment for the April to June 2026 quarter is still due by 28 July 2026 under the old rules. Payday Super then starts 1 July. For many businesses, particularly those on monthly payroll, that could mean paying the equivalent of around four months of super contributions within the same calendar month.
A business with a $100,000 monthly wage bill could see approximately $48,000 in super obligations fall due during July. Scale up from there based on your wage bill and pay cycle.
How many extra payment events you're looking at
Whatever your pay cycle, the number of super payment events per year jumps sharply.
| Pay cycle | Current super payments p.a. | Under Payday Super | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Weekly | 4 | Up to 52 | +48 |
| Fortnightly | 4 | Up to 26 | +22 |
| Monthly | 4 | 12 | +8 |
For wage-heavy sectors like construction, hospitality, transport, manufacturing and healthcare, this isn't just an admin change. It's a structural shift in when cash leaves the business.
The working capital hit nobody's costed
For many SMEs, the transition effectively accelerates the timing of super payments, creating a one-off working capital impact that can be similar to a quarter's worth of super contributions. That's the buffer the quarterly system has been quietly providing. From 1 July, it's gone.
The ScotPac SME Growth Index (Round 24, conducted November 2025 with 728 SMEs across Australia) found that while 88% of SMEs report some understanding of the changes, 68% have made no cashflow preparations for the transition, rising to 78% among micro-SMEs with fewer than 10 employees. ACCI's February to March 2026 business survey added that only 50% of businesses were prepared to make the change, and 45% were concerned the reforms would negatively impact near-term cashflow.
Businesses that model the impact before 30 June are likely to be better prepared for the transition.
If you're already financing equipment, this stacks on top
Most Payday Super coverage treats SMEs as one uniform group with one cashflow problem. The reality for businesses on EasyAsset's marketplaces is more layered. Operators already running asset finance on forklifts, refrigeration, imaging equipment or kitchen fitouts now have monthly equipment repayments competing for the same cash that's about to start paying super weekly or fortnightly.
The squeeze isn't theoretical. Three scenarios we're already modelling with clients:
- Hospitality venue on weekly payroll. Wages and super go out every Thursday. Card and bank settlements arrive quickly but margins are thin and supplier terms often sit at 30 days. The July double-month lands during a quieter trading period in many regions.
- Industrial fabricator or transport operator on 60-day invoice terms. Pay cycle is fortnightly, invoice-to-cash sits at 45 to 60 days. The gap between paying super and receiving customer settlement already stretches close to six weeks, before the July overlap is factored in.
- Medical or allied health practice with mixed billing. Rostered clinical staff paid fortnightly. Reimbursement timing varies across Medicare, private health funds and patient invoices. Super now lands ahead of half the income that funds it.
If you're already three repayments into financing a $180,000 piece of equipment, you can't restructure that asset loan to absorb the super timing change. You need a separate facility that handles the cashflow gap without touching the existing finance.
What to do before 30 June 2026
A few practical steps to take in the next six weeks:
- Model the July hit on your specific numbers. Project the cash impact of one quarterly super payment plus your new per-pay-run obligations in the same month.
- Confirm your payroll software is Payday Super ready. Speak to your provider about timing, qualifying earnings configuration, and reporting changes.
- Sort your clearing house before 30 June. If you currently use the SBSCH, you need a SuperStream compliant alternative in place.
- Line up working capital now, not in July. The point of arranging credit early is to have it available before you need it, not to apply when cashflow is already under pressure.
That last point is where we come in.
How EasyAsset Finance helps
We work with 50+ Australian bank and non-bank lenders and structure cashflow facilities for SMEs across every sector our marketplaces serve, from industrial to medical to hospitality. For Payday Super specifically, three facility types come up most often.
| Facility type | Best fit | Indicative approval speed | Typical security |
|---|---|---|---|
| Line of credit | Bridging the July double-month and ongoing per-pay-run cashflow gaps without a fixed loan sitting on the books year-round | 5 to 10 business days | Director guarantee, sometimes property |
| Invoice finance | Businesses with 30 to 90 day debtor terms and steady invoicing volume, where the gap is mostly debtor-driven | 7 to 14 business days | The invoices themselves |
| Short-term business loan | A one-off structured cover of one full payroll-plus-super cycle, often paired with a smaller line of credit for the volatile bridge | 24 hours to 7 business days | Often unsecured for established trading history |
For deeper context on short-term facilities specifically, see our guide to when short-term business loans are worth it.
The right structure depends on your pay cycle, your debtor terms, and how tight your existing cash position is. There's no single right answer, which is why we model it with you before recommending a product. If you want context on what lenders weigh up before approving, we've broken that down in what banks look for when approving your loan.
Get ahead of 1 July
The cleanest position to be in on 1 July 2026 is one where the changeover is just a calendar event. That means having your payroll, your clearing house, and your working capital sorted in May or June, not in July when the first double-month hits.
Want us to model the cashflow impact for your business and quote on a facility that fits the shape of the gap? Get a free quote from EasyAsset Finance. No impact to your credit score, and our brokers compare across 50+ lenders to find the structure that fits your business, not just the first product that fits the lender.

