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Switching bank accounts may be easier than you think Read our tips if you are thinking about switching bank accounts. |
| Superannuation calculator - |
| Your own after-tax contribution | Pre-tax contributions or 'salary sacrificing' |
| Co-contributions | Contributing for your spouse |
Concessional contributions or 'salary sacrificing'
Higher income earners can benefit if your employer allows extra contributions from your pre-tax income, or 'salary sacrifice'. (If you're eligible to receive a government co-contribution, you may be better off making after-tax contributions.)
Suppose you earn $70,000 before tax and want to top up super. You 'sacrifice' $10,000 in salary, getting a 'new' salary of $60,000 on which there's less tax because there's less income. Your sacrificed $10,000 goes into your super with only 15% in contributions tax taken out. As a result, you've invested more money than by taking the same $10,000 in normal pay, paying normal tax and then investing what was left.
Negotiate these arrangements carefully with your employer. Make sure salary sacrificing won't reduce what your employer would otherwise contribute. Legally, salary-sacrifice contributions are 'employer contributions' which your employer may be entitled to count as part of the 'super guarantee'. Unless you agree otherwise, your employer may be entitled to:
· reduce their usual contribution by the total amount you salary sacrifice or
· pay a lower contribution based on your new 'reduced' salary.
The maximum amount your employer and you can contribute pre-tax in any one financial year is $50,000. You will have to pay tax at the rate of 31.5% on excessive contributions.
However, if you're over 50 years of age, or turning 50 before 30 June 2012, a transitional period, ending on 30 June 2012, allows you to contribute extra. Once you turn 50 (or if you're already 50 or older), you can contribute up to $100,000 in each financial year up to 30 June 2012 including the financial year during which you turn 50.
For example, if you turn 50 on 1 September 2009, you will be able to make $100,000 of contributions in the 2009-2010, 2010-2011 and 2011-12 financial years. This $100,000 limit will not be indexed.
Contributing for your spouse
You can claim a tax offset, up to a set amount, on super you pay on behalf of your spouse if they have a low or nil income. A 'spouse' includes another person who, although not legally married to you, lives with you on a bona fide domestic basis as your husband or wife, but does not include a person who lives separately and apart from you on a permanent basis. The Australian Taxation Office can tell you more.