Super guarantee calculator

The super guarantee is the compulsory super your employer pays on top of your salary. From 1 July 2025 the rate is 12%. On an $85,000 salary that is $10,200 a year, paid into your fund, not taken from your take-home pay. Employers only have to pay the guarantee on earnings up to the maximum contribution base, set at $270,830 for 2026-27. That caps the compulsory amount at $32,500 for the year. The calculator shows your yearly super at 12%. It is an estimate from ATO rates.

Super guarantee calculator

$10,200 super guarantee per year
Rate (2026–27)
12%
Per quarter
$2,550

Paid by your employer into your fund, on top of salary — never out of take-home pay.

Rates and contribution bases by year

YearSG rateMax contribution base
2024–2511.5%$65,070 / quarter
2025–2612%$62,500 / quarter
2026–2712%$270,830 / year

From 1 July 2026 the ATO sets the maximum contribution base annually rather than per quarter.

Worked example

On a salary of $85,000 in 2026–27, the super guarantee at 12% is $10,200 a year ($2,550 a quarter), paid by the employer into the fund on top of salary. It never comes out of take-home pay — see the full picture on the $85,000 take-home page or compare with salary sacrificing.

Frequently asked

Is super on top of my pay or included in it?
For most employees the guarantee is paid on top of your salary, into your fund. On $85,000 at 12%, that is $10,200 a year. It is not deducted from your take-home pay.
Is there a cap on how much super my employer must pay?
Yes. Employers only have to pay the guarantee up to the maximum contribution base, set at $270,830 for 2026-27. Earnings above the base do not attract compulsory super, which caps it at $32,500 for the year.
Will the 12% rate rise further?
No. 12% from 1 July 2025 is the final legislated rate for the super guarantee. There are no further scheduled increases in the current schedule.