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Employment Lawyers Australia, Payday Super, Casual Conversion & Non‑compete (2026)

By Global Law Experts
– posted 1 hour ago

Last updated: 8 May 2026

Australian employers face a convergence of workforce reforms in 2026 that demands immediate legal and operational attention. Employment lawyers Australia-wide are advising clients on three headline changes: payday super obligations commencing 1 July 2026, tightened casual conversion rules that expand employee rights to permanent status, and advancing federal proposals to restrict or ban non‑compete clauses. Each reform carries distinct litigation risk, from ATO‑issued penalties and director liability on late superannuation, to backpay class actions arising from misclassified casuals, to injunction proceedings over unenforceable restraints.

This guide maps the compliance obligations, sets out the practical steps employers must take in the next 30, 60 and 90 days, and identifies the tribunal and courtroom triggers that should prompt immediate engagement with specialist employment counsel.

Five Immediate Employer Actions

  • Payroll audit. Map every pay component to the new qualifying earnings (QE) definition and confirm your clearing house can remit super on payday.
  • Contract review. Identify every casual engagement letter, contractor agreement and restraint clause that requires amendment before 1 July 2026.
  • Casual conversion audit. Extract headcount, tenure and rostering data to determine which casuals are eligible for conversion and when notices must issue.
  • Non‑compete review. Flag every current and template non‑compete for scope, duration and geographic reach; prepare enforceable alternatives.
  • Engage counsel. Retain employment litigation specialists now, remediation before a regulator investigation or employee claim materially reduces exposure.

Payday Super: Immediate Employer Obligations from 1 July 2026

Quick answer: From 1 July 2026, employers must pay superannuation guarantee (SG) contributions at the same time they pay wages to eligible employees, replacing the former quarterly cycle. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) has published detailed guidance and an employer checklist to support the transition.

Under the payday superannuation July 2026 framework, the quarterly SG payment deadline disappears. Instead, super contributions must be remitted so that they reach the employee’s fund within seven calendar days of each payday. The reform is designed to close the gap that allowed employers, sometimes deliberately, sometimes through administrative neglect, to withhold super for up to three months. For payroll compliance teams, the operational shift is significant: systems must calculate, report and transmit SG on every pay run rather than reconciling a lump sum each quarter.

What Counts as Qualifying Earnings

Payday super introduces qualifying earnings (QE) as the new base for calculating SG. QE broadly combines ordinary time earnings (OTE) with certain additional payments. Payroll teams should map every pay component, base salary, overtime loadings, allowances, bonuses and commission, against the ATO’s QE definition to confirm which elements attract SG. Getting this mapping wrong is the single fastest route to underpayment exposure.

Payroll Integration Checklist

  • Confirm system capability. Verify that your payroll software (or outsourced payroll provider) can calculate and lodge SG contributions on each pay run, not just quarterly.
  • Test clearing‑house throughput. Ensure your super clearing house can accept and process contributions at the frequency of your pay cycle, weekly, fortnightly or monthly.
  • Model cashflow impact. Replacing four quarterly outflows with 26 or 52 smaller payments changes working‑capital requirements. Finance teams should model the impact before 1 July 2026.
  • Update employee records. Validate fund details, USIs (unique superannuation identifiers) and membership numbers; rejected or misrouted contributions will trigger late‑payment penalties.
  • Reconcile contractor classifications. Contractors who are employees at law attract SG; payday super makes misclassification more visible and more costly.

Clearing House & SMSF Considerations

Self‑managed super funds (SMSFs) present a particular processing risk: unlike large industry and retail funds, SMSFs may not have electronic payment infrastructure optimised for high‑frequency contributions. Employers with staff directing SG to SMSFs should confirm acceptance protocols and, where necessary, require employees to provide compliant electronic payment details. Industry commentary, including practitioner notes from Heffron, suggests that SMSF trustees and their advisers must also prepare for the increased volume of incoming contributions and the associated reporting obligations.

Pay frequency SG calculation trigger Contribution must reach fund by
Weekly Each weekly pay run 7 calendar days after payday
Fortnightly Each fortnightly pay run 7 calendar days after payday
Monthly Each monthly pay run 7 calendar days after payday

Litigation Risk: Late SG Under Payday Super

The consequences of late SG under the new regime are severe. The ATO retains its existing enforcement powers, including the superannuation guarantee charge (SGC), which adds an interest component and an administration fee on top of the shortfall amount, but the move to payday frequency means each late pay run generates a separate compliance event. Industry observers expect that the compounding effect will make systemic payroll failures far more expensive, far faster, than under the quarterly system. Directors of companies that fail to remit on time face personal liability under director‑penalty notice provisions.

For large employers with hundreds or thousands of employees paid weekly, even a short system outage could produce thousands of individual shortfall events, a scenario that, in underpayment class actions, dramatically inflates the headline liability figure.

Casual Conversion 2026: New Rules and Employer Exposure

Quick answer: The 2026 casual employment rules strengthen employee pathways to permanent conversion and impose tighter obligations on employers to notify eligible casuals of their rights. Non‑compliance risks backpay claims for entitlements, annual leave, personal leave and redundancy pay, that the employee would have accrued as a permanent worker.

The Fair Work Act’s casual conversion framework has been progressively tightened. Under the current regime, eligible casual employees may request conversion to permanent (full‑time or part‑time) employment after a qualifying period of regular and systematic engagement. The 2026 amendments reinforce employer obligations to proactively assess and notify eligible employees of their conversion rights within prescribed windows.

Assessing Casual vs Permanent: The Real‑World Test

The critical question is whether the employment relationship, in practice, reflects a genuine casual engagement, irregular hours, no firm advance commitment, genuine mutual flexibility, or whether it has evolved into a pattern indistinguishable from permanent work. Courts and tribunals look at the substance of the arrangement, not merely the label on the contract. An employee described as “casual” who works a fixed Monday‑to‑Friday roster for 18 months is, for practical purposes, a permanent employee denied leave entitlements. That gap is the basis of backpay exposure, and it can extend back years.

Drafting Conversion Notices and Uniform Clauses

Employers should review every casual engagement letter and enterprise agreement clause dealing with conversion. Recommended drafting controls include:

  • Clear casual‑indicator language. State the absence of a firm advance commitment to ongoing work, specify that shifts may be offered and refused, and confirm that the casual loading compensates for the absence of leave entitlements.
  • Conversion notice template. Prepare a standard‑form notice that complies with Fair Work requirements, including the employee’s right to accept or decline conversion and the process for employer refusal on reasonable business grounds.
  • Audit trigger dates. Build automated reminders in HR systems to flag when a casual employee approaches the qualifying period so that conversion assessments and notices are issued within the statutory window.

How to Run a Conversion Audit

A practical casual conversion audit should extract the following data fields for every casual employee: engagement start date, total weeks of continuous service, average weekly hours over the most recent six‑month period, rostering pattern (fixed vs variable), and whether a conversion notice has previously been issued. Cross‑reference this data against the statutory eligibility criteria. Any employee who meets the threshold and has not received a compliant notice represents an open compliance gap, and, potentially, a backpay liability.

Non‑Compete Ban 2026: Current Status and What Employers Should Do Now

Quick answer: As of May 2026, federal proposals to restrict or ban non‑compete clauses for workers below a specified income threshold are advancing through the legislative process. The reforms are proposed and subject to Parliamentary approval; however, employment lawyers Australia‑wide are advising employers to treat restrictions as probable and to act now.

Non‑compete clauses have long been a standard feature of Australian employment contracts, particularly for senior staff, sales teams and anyone with access to trade secrets or client relationships. The federal government’s proposed reforms aim to prohibit non‑compete clauses for employees earning below a set income threshold, a move that, if enacted, would render a large proportion of existing restraints unenforceable. Even before formal enactment, courts have been narrowing the scope of enforceable non‑competes, requiring employers to demonstrate that each restraint is reasonable in scope, duration and geographic reach.

If a Ban Passes: Immediate Employer Playbook

  • Audit every existing non‑compete. Identify which employees currently have non‑compete clauses and whether their earnings fall below the proposed threshold.
  • Pause new broad non‑competes. Stop issuing boilerplate restraints to new hires until the legislative position is clear.
  • Communicate with affected employees. Where restraints may become unenforceable, prepare clear messaging to avoid confusion during exits.
  • Review separation agreement templates. Ensure that exit packages and deed‑of‑release templates do not rely solely on non‑competes for post‑employment protection.

Drafting Alternatives to Non‑Competes

Even if non‑competes survive for higher earners, the likely practical effect will be that employers must justify every restraint on its specific facts. Alternatives that are already enforceable, and that courts view more favourably, include:

  • Non‑solicitation clauses. Prohibit approaching specific clients or colleagues rather than working for a competitor generally.
  • Confidentiality and IP agreements. Protect proprietary information directly, without restricting the employee’s right to work.
  • Garden‑leave provisions. Require the employee to serve out a notice period (on full pay) without attending the workplace, limiting their ability to take clients or knowledge to a competitor while the restraint period runs.
  • Deferred compensation or retention incentives. Tie bonus payments or equity vesting to a post‑employment period, creating a financial incentive for voluntary compliance.

Mitigating Risk in Employee Exits

Employers should treat every senior departure as a restraint‑enforcement decision point. Before accepting a resignation or terminating employment, review the specific non‑compete clause, assess enforceability, and decide whether to pursue injunctive relief or negotiate a separation agreement that achieves the same protection through non‑solicitation and confidentiality undertakings.

NES Changes 2026, Redundancy Obligations and Unfair Dismissal Triggers

Quick answer: The National Employment Standards (NES) set minimum entitlements for all national‑system employees. Employers should monitor the Fair Work Commission for any indexed threshold changes, including the high‑income threshold that determines unfair dismissal eligibility, and confirm that redundancy pay scales and consultation obligations align with the current NES.

Obligation Pre‑2026 position 2026 position / action required
High‑income threshold (unfair dismissal access) Indexed annually by Fair Work Commission Confirm latest indexed amount (published on fairwork.gov.au); employees above the threshold who are not covered by an award or enterprise agreement cannot bring unfair dismissal claims.
Redundancy pay scale NES scale: 4–16 weeks based on tenure No structural change to the scale; ensure payroll systems calculate correctly, particularly for long‑tenure employees.
Consultation obligations Obligation to consult under applicable award/EA and NES s.389 Review consultation processes; failure to genuinely consult is a common ground for unfair dismissal challenge on redundancy.
Notice of termination NES minimum notice periods (1–5 weeks based on tenure; additional week for employees over 45) Confirm HR systems automate correct notice calculation; under‑notice triggers damages claims.

The high‑income threshold is adjusted each year by the Fair Work Commission. Employers should check the current figure on the Fair Work Ombudsman website, because an employee just below the threshold has full access to the unfair dismissal jurisdiction, a material litigation risk for any restructuring or performance‑management process. Redundancy obligations under the NES remain unchanged in structure, but the interaction between NES entitlements and modern‑award or enterprise‑agreement terms must be checked for each affected role.

Litigation and Tribunal Risk: Common Employer Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

Quick answer: Most employment litigation that reaches the tribunal or Federal Court involves avoidable errors, late super, misclassified casuals, poorly documented redundancies and overbroad restraints. Early identification and remediation dramatically reduce financial exposure.

Across underpayment class actions and tribunal proceedings, certain patterns recur:

  • Systematic late SG. Employers who relied on quarterly deadlines and routinely paid late face compounding SGC assessments under payday super. The ATO’s compliance focus has intensified, and director‑penalty notices make these liabilities personal.
  • Casual misclassification at scale. Large hospitality, retail and logistics employers are particularly exposed. A single misclassified role, replicated across hundreds of employees, produces a multi‑million‑dollar backpay liability when leave entitlements are recalculated.
  • Failure to offer conversion. Employers who do not issue conversion notices within the statutory window face claims that the employee should have been treated as permanent from the eligibility date, again, with retrospective entitlement calculations.
  • Overbroad non‑competes. Courts have consistently refused to enforce restraints that are wider than reasonably necessary. Employers who rely on unenforced non‑competes as a deterrent risk adverse costs orders when they attempt enforcement and fail.
  • Defective redundancy consultation. A redundancy that is genuine in substance can still be set aside if the employer did not comply with consultation obligations under the relevant award or enterprise agreement.

When to Call Counsel: Escalation Triggers

  • ATO audit notice or request for SG records
  • Employee or union request for conversion or classification review
  • Receipt of an unfair dismissal application or general protections claim
  • Discovery of systematic payroll or classification errors during internal audit
  • Senior employee resignation where a restraint clause may need enforcement
  • Media or regulatory inquiry regarding wage practices

Early legal engagement, before a claim is filed or an investigation is formalised, is consistently the most cost‑effective strategy. Voluntary rectification, properly documented and legally advised, can reduce penalties, avoid public enforcement action and limit class‑action exposure.

Practical Employer Checklist: 30 / 60 / 90 Days

The following checklist gives employers a structured timeline for achieving payroll compliance and reducing litigation risk ahead of 1 July 2026 and beyond.

Within 30 Days

  • Export full payroll data: pay frequencies, pay components (OTE, allowances, bonuses, commissions), clearing‑house provider details and current super remittance dates.
  • Map each pay component against the ATO’s qualifying earnings definition.
  • Identify all casual employees and extract tenure, hours and rostering data for the conversion audit.
  • Pull every current employment contract and template containing a non‑compete clause.

Within 60 Days

  • Complete QE mapping and test payroll system’s ability to calculate and lodge SG on each pay run.
  • Conduct clearing‑house readiness test, submit a trial contribution batch at payday frequency.
  • Issue conversion notices to eligible casuals within the statutory window.
  • Brief the board or senior leadership on cashflow impact and litigation exposure.

Within 90 Days

  • Go live with payday super processes ahead of 1 July 2026 (dry‑run at least one full pay cycle).
  • Finalise revised contract templates, casual engagement letters, non‑compete alternatives and separation‑agreement deeds.
  • Retain external employment counsel to review audit findings and remediate any identified gaps.
  • Implement ongoing monitoring: quarterly compliance review, annual casual‑conversion audit, and real‑time SG remittance tracking.

Timeline of Key Legislative and Implementation Dates

Date Reform Employer action required
1 July 2026 Payday Super, SG payable at payday; ATO rules on QE and timing take effect Update payroll systems; map QE; confirm clearing‑house and fund remittance process; complete cashflow modelling.
2026 (subject to Parliamentary timetable) Casual conversion reforms, expanded statutory windows and employer obligations Audit casual workforce; review engagement letters and contracts; prepare conversion notices and HR processes.
2026 (proposed, subject to Parliamentary approval) Non‑compete reforms, possible ban for employees below income threshold Pause routine use of broad non‑competes; consult counsel; adopt alternatives (non‑solicitation, confidentiality, garden leave).

Conclusion

The 2026 reform wave, payday super, casual conversion and the non‑compete ban 2026 proposals, represents the most significant single‑year shift in Australian employer obligations in over a decade. Each reform creates distinct compliance obligations and distinct litigation pathways. The employers who engage employment lawyers Australia-wide now, run their audits before 1 July 2026, and implement the payroll, contract and HR controls outlined above will materially reduce their exposure to penalties, class actions and tribunal proceedings. Those who wait will face compounding risk, and compounding cost.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Andrew Chakrabarty at Adero Law, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Australian Taxation Office, About Payday Super
  2. Australian Taxation Office, Payday Super Checklist for Employers
  3. Fair Work Ombudsman
  4. Pitcher Partners, Payday Super 2026: What Australian Employers Need to Know
  5. Xero, Payday Super
  6. Allens
  7. Heffron, Payday Super and SMSFs

FAQs

Q: When does payday super start?
A: Payday super begins on 1 July 2026. From that date, employers must make superannuation guarantee contributions at the same time they pay wages and ensure funds receive contributions within seven calendar days of each payday. (Source: ATO, About Payday Super.)
A: Qualifying earnings combine ordinary time earnings with certain additional payments to form the SG calculation base. Payroll teams must map every pay component to the QE definition before 1 July 2026 to avoid underpayment. (Source: ATO.)
A: The 2026 casual employment rules require employers to assess eligible casual employees and issue conversion notices within statutory windows. Failure to do so risks backpay claims for accrued leave and other permanent‑employee entitlements. (Source: Fair Work Ombudsman.)
A: As of May 2026, federal proposals to restrict or ban non‑competes for workers below a specified income threshold are advancing but remain subject to Parliamentary approval. Employers should narrow existing clauses and prepare enforceable alternatives now. (Source: Federal Government policy announcements.)
A: Export pay frequency, pay components (OTE versus allowances), employer clearing‑house settings, super remittance dates and contractor‑versus‑employee classifications. Reconcile this data against the QE definition for cashflow planning and payroll compliance. (Sources: ATO; Xero.)
A: Document internal audits, remediate proactively through voluntary rectification, retain specialist counsel for negotiation, and implement real‑time payroll controls. Early settlement, before regulatory enforcement, consistently reduces total exposure. (Source: litigation precedent and practitioner commentary.)
A: The high‑income threshold is indexed annually by the Fair Work Commission and determines whether an award‑free or agreement‑free employee can bring an unfair dismissal claim. Employers should confirm the current figure on the Fair Work Ombudsman website before any termination or restructure. (Source: Fair Work Commission.)

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Employment Lawyers Australia, Payday Super, Casual Conversion & Non‑compete (2026)

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