Your Details
Do you have a HECS/HELP loan?
$3,350
$279
$129
Before vs After Comparison
| Before | After | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Take-Home Pay (monthly) | $4,176 | $3,622 | -$554 |
| Tax Paid (annual) | $9,888 | $6,538 | -$3,350 |
| Super Added (annual) | $6,120 | $14,620 | +$8,500 |
| Effective Tax Rate | 16.5% | 10.9% | -5.6% |
How does salary sacrifice save tax?
Instead of receiving $10,000 as salary (taxed at your marginal rate), it goes directly into your super fund, where it's only taxed at 15%. The difference between your marginal rate and 15% is your tax saving.
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Before vs After: $10,000 Salary Sacrifice
How a $60,000 salary changes when you sacrifice $10,000 into super (2025–26 rates, no HECS debt).
| No Sacrifice | $10K Sacrifice | Difference | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Salary | $60,000 | $60,000 | — |
| Taxable Income | $60,000 | $50,000 | -$10,000 |
| Income Tax + Medicare | $9,888 | $6,538 | -$3,350 |
| Super Contributions | $7,200 | $17,200 | +$10,000 |
| Net Take-Home Pay | $50,112 | $43,462 | -$6,650 |
Your take-home pay drops by $6,650, but you save $3,350 in tax and add an extra $10,000 to super.
Contribution Breakdown on $60K
How your super contributions break down with a $10,000 salary sacrifice.
| Annual | Monthly | Fortnightly | Weekly | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Salary | $60,000 | $5,000 | $2,308 | $1,154 |
| Employer Super (SG 12%) | $7,200 | $600 | $277 | $138 |
| Salary Sacrifice | $10,000 | $833 | $385 | $192 |
| Total Super | $17,200 | $1,433 | $662 | $331 |
Total concessional contributions: $17,200 of the $30,000 annual cap (57% used).
Understanding Salary Sacrifice on $60K
On a $60,000 salary, you sit in the 30% tax bracket ($45,001–$135,000) for the 2025–26 financial year. Your marginal tax rate is 30%, plus the 2% Medicare levy, for a combined marginal rate of 32%.
When you salary sacrifice into super, the redirected amount is taxed at just 15% inside the super fund instead of your marginal rate. That means every dollar you sacrifice saves you 17 cents in tax — the difference between 32% and 15%.
Your employer already contributes $7,200 in Superannuation Guarantee (12% of $60,000). With a $10,000 salary sacrifice on top, your total concessional contributions reach $17,200, leaving $12,800 of the $30,000 cap unused. Contributions above the cap are added back to your assessable income and taxed at your marginal rate.