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Division 293 (Div. 293) tax is an additional 15% tax levied on concessional superannuation contributions made by high-income earners. It kicks in when a specially defined “income” figure exceeds $250,000 – and it catches more people than you might expect.

Division 293 tax - additional tax on superannuation contributions for high income earners in Australia

What is Division 293 tax?

Concessional contributions (CCs) – such as your employer’s Superannuation Guarantee payments, salary sacrifice amounts, and personal deductible contributions – are normally taxed inside your super fund at just 15%. For most Australians that’s a significant saving compared to their marginal rate.

However, the Australian Government decided that the 15% rate is too concessional for very high earners. So Div. 293 adds a second layer of 15% on the relevant contributions, bringing the effective contributions tax to 30% – still below the top marginal rate of 47%, but noticeably higher than the standard rate.

Importantly, the tax is levied on you personally, not on your super fund. You receive an assessment notice from the ATO after you lodge your tax return.

How the tax is calculated

The ATO utilizes a very broad definition of “income” to determine whether you cross the $250,000 threshold.

Div. 293 income is the sum of:
  • Taxable income
  • Reportable fringe benefits
  • Net financial investment losses
  • Net rental property losses
  • Net family trust distribution tax amounts
  • Low tax contributions (CCs within your CC cap)
  • Super lump sum taxed elements at 0% rate
  • Assessable First Home Super Saver released amounts
Div. 293 tax = 15% x the lesser of: (Div. 293 income – $250,000) or (non-excessive CCs)
It does not apply to excess concessional contributions, as those are already taxed at your personal marginal tax rate.

Notice what’s included in that income figure: rental losses and investment losses are added back in, which is why negative gearing provides no shelter from this tax. Similarly, salary sacrificing more into super reduces your taxable income but your CCs are captured as “low tax contributions” in the income calculation – so that doesn’t help either.

Three worked examples

The best way to understand the tax is to see it in action. These examples follow one individual, Bob, across three different income scenarios for 2025/26.

Example 1
Bob – No tax
Salary$225,000
SG contributions$24,750
Div. 293 income$249,750
Threshold exceeded by$0
No Div. 293 tax
Example 2
Bob + interest
Salary + interest$235,000
SG contributions$24,750
Div. 293 income$259,750
Tax applies on$9,750
Partial – $1,463 tax
Example 3
Bob – Full hit
All income$265,250
SG contributions$24,750
Div. 293 income$290,000
Tax applies on$24,750
Full – $3,713 tax
Key insight Even when Div. 293 applies in full, your effective contributions tax rate is 30% – still 17 percentage points below the top marginal rate of 47%. Concessional contributions remain tax-effective even for those subject to this additional tax.

The broad income definition

One of the most misunderstood aspects of Div. 293 is its unusually wide definition of income. Unlike your regular taxable income calculation, this definition adds back losses that are normally deductible.

What’s included in Div. 293 income
  • Your taxable income (including salary, business income, and investment returns)
  • Reportable fringe benefits from your employer
  • Net financial investment losses – shares, managed funds, etc.
  • Net rental property losses (negative gearing is added back)
  • Family trust distributions – the net amount on which family trust distribution tax has been paid
  • Low tax contributions – your concessional contributions within your CC cap
  • One-off amounts: capital gains from asset sales, termination payments, super lump sums
Watch out for one-off events Selling an investment property, receiving a redundancy, or taking a super lump sum can push you over the $250,000 threshold in a year you’d otherwise be below it. Plan ahead with your adviser if any of these events are on the horizon.

Catch-up contributions and Div. 293

If your total super balance was below $500,000 at the prior 30 June, you may be eligible to carry forward unused concessional contribution cap amounts and make larger contributions. Be aware: Div. 293 tax applies to the full amount of your increased cap – not just the standard annual cap of $30,000 (2025/26). A large catch-up contribution in a high-income year can generate a significant Div. 293 bill.


Payment options

After you lodge your tax return, the ATO will issue a Division 293 assessment notice. Tax is payable within 21 days of the notice. You have two main choices:

🏦

Pay personally

Pay directly to the ATO via BPAY, credit or debit card, or through your myGov account.

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Release from super

Elect within 60 days to release the funds from your super account. The ATO issues a release authority to your fund, which must pay within 10 days.

Defined benefit deferral

Members of defined benefit funds may defer payment until benefits become payable. Interest accrues on the deferred amount.

Important: the 60-day window The 60-day election period lets you decide whether to release from super – but it does not extend the due date for payment. The tax is still due within 21 days of the notice, even if you intend to fund it from super. Keep a close eye on your myGov inbox.

Can you reduce Division 293 tax?

Planning opportunities are limited, but not zero. Because the income definition is so broad, many common strategies are ineffective. Here’s what works and what doesn’t:

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Charitable giving

Gifts to deductible gift recipients (DGRs), private ancillary funds, or public ancillary funds can reduce taxable income and therefore your Div. 293 income – provided the giving is genuine and appropriate for your financial situation.

📚

Self-education expenses

Legitimate self-education expenses related to your current employment may reduce taxable income. Ensure expenses meet ATO requirements.

🛡️

Salary continuance premiums (self-owned)

Premiums for income protection insurance you own personally (outside super) are generally tax-deductible and reduce your Div. 293 income base.

📈

Tax-advantaged investment structures

Investment bonds and super (once you’ve considered the Div. 293 impact) grow in internally-taxed environments that reduce your personal taxable income over time.

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Spouse contributions strategy

Where one partner faces Div. 293 tax, consider whether it’s more tax-effective for the lower-earning spouse to make concessional contributions instead. A spouse on a 39% marginal rate saves 24% on CCs vs 17% for the higher-income partner subject to Div. 293.

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Negative gearing

Rental losses are added back into Div. 293 income, so negative gearing provides no reduction.

💰

Extra salary sacrifice

While salary sacrifice reduces taxable income, those concessional contributions are included as “low tax contributions” in the Div. 293 income definition – no net benefit.


Are super contributions still worthwhile?

The answer, for most high-income earners, is yes. Here’s the comparison:

Top marginal tax rate (income above $190k) 47%
Effective rate on CCs with Div. 293 tax 30%
Tax on earnings inside super fund up to 15%

Even after paying Div. 293, there’s a 17% tax saving on each concessional contribution compared to receiving that income as salary. And once money is inside super, earnings are taxed at a maximum of 15% – compared to up to 47% if held in your personal name.


Key takeaways

Summary Div. 293 tax applies at 15% on concessional contributions when your specially-defined income exceeds $250,000. It’s levied on you personally, not your fund. The effective contributions tax rises to 30% – still below the 47% top rate. Planning opportunities are limited, but spouse strategies, genuine deductible expenses, and careful timing of one-off income events can help. Always speak to your financial adviser before making large contributions in a year where your income is likely to be elevated.

This article is general information only and does not constitute personal financial or tax advice. You should seek advice from a licensed financial adviser and registered tax agent before acting on anything in this article. Information is based on legislation current as at June 2026 and is subject to change.

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