Starting in 2025, several significant pension rule changes are being introduced across Australia — reforms that could affect your superannuation (super), age pension, retirement planning, and how much you can access from your savings. Here’s a practical, reader-friendly breakdown to help you understand what’s changing — and what you can do about it.

What’s Changing: Key Reforms Explained
1. Increase in the Super Guarantee Rate
From 1 July 2025, the compulsory employer superannuation guarantee (SG) contribution rate rises from 11.5 % to 12 %.
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This means more money is pushed into your super each pay cycle — good news for long-term retirement balances.
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It especially helps younger workers, or those who stay in the workforce for longer.
2. Super on Paid Parental Leave
Also starting 1 July 2025: super contributions will be made on government-funded Paid Parental Leave (PPL) at the full 12% rate.
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This is a big win for parents, particularly for reducing the gender gap in retirement savings.
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Eligible parents will receive their PPL super as a lump sum after the financial year ends.
3. Transfer Balance Cap Increase
The Transfer Balance Cap (the maximum amount you can move into a tax-free retirement super account) increases from AU$1.9 million to AU$2 million.
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This gives high-balance account holders more headroom to enjoy tax-free income in retirement.
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It may also affect how much you can contribute into super (total super balance matters).
4. Higher Tax on Very Large Super Balances
New “better-targeted” tax measures are coming in for super balances over AU$3 million:
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Under the revised policy, only realised earnings (capital gains when you cash out) will be taxed, rather than unrealised gains.
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The tax rate:
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Balances between AU$3 million and AU$10 million may face a 30% tax on earnings.
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Balances over AU$10 million could be taxed at 40% on earnings.
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Both the $3 m and $10 m thresholds will be indexed to inflation, improving fairness.
5. Low-Income Super Offset Boost
The Low Income Superannuation Tax Offset (LISTO) is being made more generous:
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From 1 July 2027, the maximum LISTO refund will go up from $500 to $810.
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The income eligibility will increase from $37,000 to $45,000, meaning more low-income workers will benefit.
6. Changes to Super Withdrawal / Tax Rules (From November 2025)
Big shifts are happening to how super money is withdrawn, taxed, and used in retirement:
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From 2 November 2025, for people under 60, withdrawals will be taxed up to 15%, plus a 2% Medicare levy on large amounts (above $225,000 in a financial year).
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For Australians aged 60 and over, lump-sum withdrawals remain tax-free.
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Transition-to-Retirement (TTR) pensions: earnings within TTR accounts will now be taxed at 10%, up from 0%.
7. Age Pension Means-Test Thresholds Increasing
The asset and income test thresholds for the Age Pension are being indexed upward from 1 July 2025.
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This could enable more retirees to qualify for a full Age Pension, or increase the amount they receive.
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New thresholds (from IFPA):
Situation Asset Test (homeowner) Income Test (maximum) Single (full pension) $321,500 $218 / fortnight Couple-combined (full pension) $481,500 $380 / fortnight
8. MyGov Digital Identity Requirement
From 1 June 2025, those applying for or checking their pension eligibility must complete digital identity verification via MyGov.
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This aims to streamline applications and reduce fraud.
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It’s more secure, but retirees unfamiliar with digital platforms may need help.
Implications for Different Australians
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Young workers: The SG increase means more retirement savings over time.
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Parents on leave: Super on paid parental leave can significantly boost long-term retirement funds.
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High-wealth retirees: The higher tax on large super balances may require more careful planning.
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Low-income earners: Stronger LISTO benefit means more savings going into super.
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Retirees relying on Age Pension: Raised threshold may help more people qualify, or get a larger pension.
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People considering early access: The new withdrawal rules make it more costly under 60, especially for large lump sums.
Tips to Navigate the New Rules
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Review your super strategy — With the SG rate rising, consider salary sacrificing or adjusting contributions.
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Check your super balance — If you’re nearing or over the thresholds ($3 m+), talk to a financial planner.
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Understand LISTO eligibility — If your income is modest, you may benefit more soon.
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Plan for withdrawals — If you’re thinking of accessing super before 60, run the tax numbers.
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Verify your MyGov identity — Don’t leave MyGov setup until next moment; complete digital ID early if needed.
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Reassess retirement forecasts — Use updated pension rules to re-run your income projections for retirement.
Why These Changes Matter
These are more than technical tweaks — they reflect a broader rebalancing of Australia’s retirement system. The government appears to be:
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Encouraging long-term saving, by increasing contributions and limiting early access.
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Targeting tax concessions more sharply, reducing advantage for ultra-wealthy super holders.
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Supporting equity, by boosting super for caregivers and low-income earners.
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Sustaining the Age Pension, by raising means-test limits so more people remain eligible for support.
For many Australians, these changes will strengthen retirement outcomes. But for others — especially high-balance super owners — they may require proactive planning to optimise.
FAQs
1. When does the Super Guarantee rate go to 12%?
From 1 July 2025, employers must pay 12% of your ordinary time earnings into your super.
2. Will I pay more tax if I have more than $3 million in super?
Yes — earnings on your super above AU$3 million may face a 30% tax, and those above $10 million could face 40%, based on realized gains.
3. Can I access my super when I turn 60?
Yes — the preservation age for many is still 60, and lump-sum withdrawals remain tax-free for people aged 60 and over.
4. What changes are there for the Age Pension income and asset tests?
From 1 July 2025, income and asset test thresholds are increasing, which may help more retirees qualify for a full or higher pension.
5. How can I benefit from the Low-Income Super Offset (LISTO)?
The LISTO refund cap will increase to $810, and the income eligibility threshold will rise to $45,000 by 1 July 2027 — meaning more low-income earners will get a better super tax refund.