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    You are at:Home»Trending & Viral News»Australia news live: Chalmers reveals surprise changes to super tax plans; fears social media ban will impose ‘social gap’ on youth | Australia news
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    Australia news live: Chalmers reveals surprise changes to super tax plans; fears social media ban will impose ‘social gap’ on youth | Australia news

    Earth & BeyondBy Earth & BeyondOctober 13, 2025008 Mins Read
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    Australia news live: Chalmers reveals surprise changes to super tax plans; fears social media ban will impose ‘social gap’ on youth | Australia news
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    Chalmers reveals surprise changes to super tax rules

    The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, has just stepped up to announce some surprise changes to the super tax rules.

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    Updated at 02.13 BST

    Key events

    Chalmers has had ‘initial’ conversation on changes with the Greens

    Chalmers said he has had an “initial conversation” about the changes with the Greens leader, Larissa Waters, after cabinet agreed to the recommendations. The treasurer said Waters would confer with her colleagues and the Greens would make their position on the matter known “in due course”.

    Chalmers said:

    I have appreciated throughout and I appreciate today the opportunity to engage constructively with the Greens in the Senate …

    It was a constructive conversation [and] I do not want to pre-empt the Greens party room. They will consider this.

    Guardian Australia has reached out to Waters for comment.

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    Updated at 02.39 BST

    Chalmers says government always takes feedback ‘seriously’, reflecting changes to super tax plans

    Chalmers was asked if this is a major retreat from the initial plans to change the superannuation tax system. He said:

    As treasurer and as a government we always try to take feedback seriously. We always try to find the best way through …

    We found another way to satisfy the same objectives. It means a fairer superannuation system from top to bottom, and means a better outcome for people on the lowest incomes and better targeted concessions for people with the biggest balances.

    And that is a good outcome from our point of view.

    Treasurer Jim Chalmers. Photograph: Mick Tsikas/AAP
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    Updated at 02.28 BST

    Fourteen times more people will benefit from new super thresholds than be adversely affected, Chalmers says

    Summing up these changes (and justifying them), Chalmers says:

    This is a government which takes feedback seriously, which works through issues and advice in a methodical and a considered way, and you’re seeing the fruits of that today. Our superannuation system is the envy of the world. It is a proud Labor creation, but it has its imperfections, and today, with these announcements, we are addressing at least two of them – the sustainability of concessions in the highest balances, and also adequacy for women and low income earners. And in doing that, we are reinforcing the objective of super as a vehicle for decent retirement savings. This goes hand in hand with our other reforms. We’ve actually done a lot to strengthen super, to make it fairer and more sustainable. We’ve legislated the objective. We got super to 12% – we’re making the changes so that we have payday super, we’re paying the superannuation guarantee on paid parental leave, and we’ll also make sure that the performance test is doing its job as well.

    I wanted to leave you with this comparison: 14 times more people will benefit from the low income super changes than will be impacted by the better targeted tax concessions. This is a fairer superannuation system from top to bottom, and it’s another part of us ensuring, as a Labor government, that more Australians are earning more, keeping more of what they earn, and also retiring with more.

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    Updated at 02.27 BST

    Chalmers says the third area of further consultation is to “find the best way to adjust the treatment of capital gains accrued prior to the start of these new arrangements, to make sure that we’ve got the base appropriately captured when it comes to the new calculations”.

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    Updated at 02.25 BST

    Chalmers says the second area where they will do “more work” is on the calculation and attribution of the realised gains.

    We are anticipating that it will be calculated at the fund level and then attributed to members with balances above $3m and $10m, but we want to be upfront with you and say that we will do a little bit more work on that. We’ve done some work behind the scenes in the lead-up to this announcement, but there is a bit more work to do.

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    Updated at 02.24 BST

    Chalmers says there are three main areas where “we will do a bit more consultation and a bit more work”.

    The first one is to make sure that we have commensurate treatment of defined benefit in these arrangements we’re announcing today, as we had in the original proposal. For example, we want to make sure that federal politicians are in when it comes to these changes. But more broadly, we want to make sure that defined benefit schemes are appropriately calculated and included in these changes in a way that they were in the original proposal.

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    Updated at 02.23 BST

    Exemption schemes for federal judges to better align with state counterparts

    Chalmers says the sixth change is to better align the treatment of federal judges’ defined benefits interests with the existing constitutional exemptions for state judges:

    Judges might have a bunch of different super accounts. This is really about the judges’ pension scheme, to make sure that there is better aligned treatment of federal and state judges when it comes to their defined benefit interests.

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    Updated at 02.37 BST

    Changes to come into effect from 1 July 2026

    Chalmers says the fifth change is made necessary by those other changes, which is a one-year delay “to consult and bed down the changes”:

    And then, ideally, legislate them as soon as we can in 2026. So pushing the start date from the middle of this year to the middle of next year, in order to do a bit more consultation, to bed down the changes and to legislate the changes.

    For all of these changes we’re announcing today, the new start date becomes 1 July 2026 except for the [low income superannuation tax offset] change, which is timed in 2027 to coincide with the government’s third tax cuts.

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    Updated at 02.36 BST

    New super tax arrangements will only apply to realised capital gains

    The fourth set of changes Chalmers says is to apply these new tax arrangements to realised gains:

    And I’ll come back in a moment to the future work, the extra work that we will do in consultation with the sector to implement that change.

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    Updated at 02.35 BST

    New super tax thresholds will be indexed, Chalmers says

    The third change Chalmers says is to index both of these thresholds to maintain relativity with the transfer balance cap, which was introduced by the Coalition:

    The transfer balance cap is indexed to CPI. These thresholds will be indexed to the transfer balance cap to maintain an appropriate relativity between the two sets of thresholds.

    We have always had in our back pocket this indexation, or an indexation like this, in order to get it through the parliament. We have also always said to you, publicly and privately, that we expect future governments would have lifted the old threshold. Here we are indexing that, to make that clear, indexing both thresholds.

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    Updated at 02.19 BST

    New $3m and $10m thresholds for super tax concessions

    The second change, Chalmers says, is to introduce two thresholds for the better targeted superannuation tax concessions:

    The first threshold is $3m, the second threshold is $10m. For earnings on super balances between $3m and $10m the rate remains 30%; the rate for over $10m becomes 40%.

    So this is still a concessional tax arrangement, but it’s better targeted. It will still only impact less than 0.5% of Australians. With the updated years and taking into consideration earnings, this means about 90,000 Australians next year will have more than $3m in their super, and about 8,000 will have more than $10m. And you’d be aware in recent weeks and months that people have been recommending a cap to us for super – this second threshold, at $10m is really instead of going down that path.

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    Updated at 02.34 BST

    Low-income super tax offset to increase from $500 to $810 for those earning under $45,000

    Chalmers goes on to “run through the main changes.”

    The first one is to increase the low income superannuation tax offset (Listo), to increase it from $500 to $810 and also to raise the eligibility from $37,000 cut off to $45,000 in 2027 to coincide with the government’s third tax cuts, this will mean more superannuation for 1.3 million Australians, of whom, 60% are women. It means the total number of eligible Australians for the Listo will become 3.1 million, and by one realistic calculation, it means about an extra $15,000 at retirement.

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    Updated at 02.34 BST

    Chalmers:

    This morning, on my recommendation, the cabinet agreed practical changes to make the superannuation system stronger, fairer and more sustainable. There are six main changes to the proposal that we put forward a couple of years ago, including one entirely new element, which is an increase to the low income superannuation tax offset. These are sensible changes, which take more than two years of feedback into account. We have worked through the issues, and we found another way to deliver on the same objectives. This means a better deal for low income workers and also better targeted concessions for the biggest balances. This will make the superannuation system fairer from top to bottom.

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    Updated at 02.14 BST

    Chalmers reveals surprise changes to super tax rules

    The treasurer, Jim Chalmers, has just stepped up to announce some surprise changes to the super tax rules.

    Share

    Updated at 02.13 BST

    Australia ban Chalmers fears Gap Impose Live media News plans reveals Social Super surprise Tax Youth
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