What Payroll Needs to Know from 1 January 2026
From 1 January 2026, changes to Child Support Protected Earnings come into effect and while the concept itself isn’t new, the impact on payroll calculations, garnishees and take home pay is.
For payroll teams, this is one of those changes that sits quietly in legislation but has very real consequences if it’s misunderstood or misapplied.
What are “Protected Earnings”?
Protected earnings are the portion of an employee’s pay that cannot be touched by child support deductions.
The intent is simple and important. Even when child support is being deducted, an employee must still be left with enough income to meet basic living costs.
Payroll’s role is to ensure that:
What’s Changing from 1 January 2026?
From 1 January 2026, the protected earnings threshold increases in line with updated policy settings.
In practical terms, this means:
Importantly, this change applies automatically, payroll cannot continue using old thresholds.
Why This Matters for Payroll
Child support deductions are not optional but neither is compliance with protected earnings rules.
If payroll deducts too much:
If payroll deducts too little:
This is a classic payroll balancing act, and one where precision matters.
Key Payroll Actions to Take Now
Changes like this remind us that confidence in payroll isn’t just about running a pay successfully, it’s about knowing your calculations still hold up when the rules change.
If you haven’t revisited your child support deduction process recently, this is your cue.
Need help reviewing your payroll deduction settings or assurance testing your compliance? Contact us at www.austpayroll.com.au
Now is the time to check, before January checks for you.