Opportunities To Save Tax With Super Contributions

Tax Deduction Opportunities with Super Contributions

 
There are some excellent tax benefits you can gain by making voluntary superannuation contributions. Generally, money invested in super is taxed at a lower rate than your personal income tax rate.

How Concessional Contributions are Taxed

Concessional (before tax) super contributions include employer super contributions made on your behalf, any salary sacrifice contributions you make, or any personal contributions that you claim a tax deduction on in your tax return. These contributions are taxed at 15% when they are received by your super fund (up to a limit of $27,500 per year), provided your annual earnings combined with superannuation contributions are less than $250,000 annually.

Personal super contributions are especially useful for people who are on higher marginal tax rates or if their employer will not to set up a salary sacrifice arrangement.

The people who would benefit the most are those who earn above $45,000 per year, as this is where the marginal tax rate plus Medicare Levy rises to 34.5%. Claiming a tax deduction on super contributions effectively makes your tax rate only 15%.

Catch up Super Payment Contributions

If you have not made maximum annual super contributions in any year from 2019 onward, you can make “carry-forward” concessional super contributions if you have a total superannuation balance of less than $500,000. You can access their unused concessional contributions caps on a rolling basis for five years. Amounts carried forward that have not been used after five years will expire.

How Low-income Earners are Taxed

If you are a low-income earner (earning up to $37,000 per year), the low-income superannuation tax offset ensures that you do not pay a higher rate of tax on your super contributions than your income tax rate. The offset will be paid directly to your super account and the payment will be equal to 15% of your concessional contributions for the year, capped at a maximum of $500.

Individuals who earn between $42,016 and $57,016 during the 2023 financial year may also be eligible for super co-contributions from the government of 50 cents for each dollar, up to a maximum of $1,000 in non-concessional (after tax) contributions.

How High-income Earners are Taxed

If you earn more than $250,000 a year (including super contributions), your concessional contributions are taxed at an additional 15%, bringing the total tax on these contributions to 30%. However, this is still less than your marginal income tax rate of 47%. This extra 15% is known as Division 293 tax.  Only the concessional contributions which make your total income exceed $250,000 are subject to the additional tax.

If your concessional contributions exceed the concessional contributions cap of $27,500 per year, the excess is included in your tax return and taxed at your marginal tax rate (less an allowance for the 15% already withheld by your super fund). You can choose to withdraw some of the excess contributions to pay the additional tax.

Next Steps

Please contact us as soon as possible if you would like to discuss saving tax with super contributions. There are many things we need to check for you to ensure you don’t exceed your super caps, you may need to seek the advice of a licensed financial advisor, you have to get the paperwork right plus the timing of your contributions is crucial to get right to entitle you to a tax deduction for them in the 2023 year.

The sooner we get started, the sooner we can help you save tax – well before 30 June for enough time to implement tax saving strategies.

Please contact us to book your consultation.

This content has been prepared by Wilson Pateras to further our commitment to proactive services and advice for our clients, by providing current information and events. Any advice is of a general nature only and does not take into account your personal objectives or financial situation. Before making any decision, you should consider your particular circumstances and whether the information is suitable to your needs including by seeking professional advice. You should also read any relevant disclosure documents. Whilst every effort has been made to verify the accuracy of this information, Wilson Pateras, its officers, employees and agents disclaim all liability, to the extent permissible by law, for any error, inaccuracy in, or omission from, the information contained above including any loss or damage suffered by any person directly or indirectly through relying on this information. Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation. 

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