Australian Income Tax Calculator
Calculate your take-home pay for FY 2025-26 and FY 2024-25. Includes income tax, Medicare levy, HECS/HELP, MLS, tax offsets and superannuation.
Understanding the calculation
How Australian Income Tax Works in 2025–26
Australia uses progressive tax brackets — you don't pay one flat rate on your entire salary. Each slice of income is taxed at an increasing rate. Here's exactly how the maths works, with real numbers from the calculator above.
Worked Example: $85,000 Salary
Australian resident, no HECS debt, claiming the tax-free threshold. FY 2025–26 rates.
| Tax Bracket | Rate | Income in Bracket | Tax | Fill |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $0 – $18,200 | 0% | $18,200 | $0 | |
| $18,201 – $45,000 | 16% | $26,799 | $4,288 | |
| $45,001 – $135,000 | 30% | $39,999 | $12,000 | |
| $135,001 – $190,000 | 37% | — | — | |
| $190,001 – ∞ | 45% | — | — | |
| Income tax before offsets | $16,288 | |||
After applying the Low Income Tax Offset (LITO) of $0, plus the 2% Medicare levy of $1,700, your total tax is $17,988. That leaves you with $67,012 take-home pay — an effective tax rate of just 21.2%, not the 30% marginal rate.
What You Actually Pay at Every Income Level
Your effective tax rate — the percentage of total income that goes to tax — is always lower than your marginal rate. Here's how it scales across common Australian salaries.
Rates include income tax and Medicare levy for Australian residents with no HECS debt. See the full 2025–26 bracket table →
What Most People Don't Realise
Four things that affect your take-home pay beyond the basic tax brackets.
Tax-free threshold
$22,575 effective
The official tax-free threshold is $18,200 — but thanks to the Low Income Tax Offset (LITO), you effectively pay $0 income tax on earnings up to around $22,575. LITO is worth up to $700 and phases out as income rises above $37,500.
Tax offsets explained →Stage 3 tax cuts
$1,804/yr saved
At $85,000, the revised Stage 3 tax cuts (from 1 July 2024) save you $1,804 per year compared to the old 2023–24 rates. The 19% bracket dropped to 16%, and the 32.5% bracket widened and dropped to 30%.
Stage 3 tax cuts explained →HECS-HELP debt
$2,700/yr repayment
At $85,000, HECS-HELP adds a compulsory repayment of $2,700 on top of your income tax. This comes out of your take-home pay and reduces your net income to $64,312. For 2025–26, the system uses marginal rates instead of the old flat-rate brackets.
HECS repayment guide →Medicare Levy Surcharge
$1,500/yr without PHI
Everyone pays the 2% Medicare levy. But if you earn over $101,000 and don't have private hospital cover, you pay an additional 1–1.5% surcharge. At $120,000, that's $1,500 — often more than basic hospital cover costs.
MLS explained →Marginal Rate vs Effective Rate
Your marginal rate is the tax on your last dollar of income — the rate you'd pay on a $1 pay rise. Your effective rate is the average across all your income. Because the first $18,200 is tax-free and lower brackets are taxed at 16%, your effective rate is always significantly lower than your marginal rate.
| Salary | Marginal Rate | Effective Rate | Take-Home Pay |
|---|---|---|---|
| $45,000 | 16% | 10.8% | $40,137 |
| $65,000 | 30% | 17.8% | $53,437 |
| $85,000 | 30% | 21.2% | $67,012 |
| $120,000 | 30% | 24.3% | $90,812 |
| $180,000 | 37% | 28.6% | $128,463 |
| $250,000 | 45% | 33.5% | $166,363 |
The calculator above applies all of these rules automatically. If you want to see how your tax has changed over time, use the historical comparison tool to compare your tax across five financial years. For a detailed explanation of our calculation pipeline, see the methodology page.
Take-Home Pay for Common Australian Salaries
Quick tax calculations for common Australian salaries. Click any amount to see a detailed breakdown including income tax, Medicare, HECS and superannuation.
$30K
Take-home: $28,490
$40K
Take-home: $36,287
$50K
Take-home: $43,462
$55K
Take-home: $46,787
$60K
Take-home: $50,112
$65K
Take-home: $53,437
$70K
Take-home: $56,812
$75K
Take-home: $60,212
$80K
Take-home: $63,612
$85K
Take-home: $67,012
$90K
Take-home: $70,412
$95K
Take-home: $73,812
$100K
Take-home: $77,212
$110K
Take-home: $84,012
$120K
Take-home: $90,812
$130K
Take-home: $97,612
$140K
Take-home: $104,063
$150K
Take-home: $110,163
$175K
Take-home: $125,413
$200K
Take-home: $139,863
Income Tax Calculators
Specialised tools for every income tax scenario
Tax Calculators
Reverse Tax Calculator
Enter your desired take-home pay and calculate the gross salary you need to earn. Accounts for all taxes, levies, and offsets.
Tax Calculators
Historical Tax Comparison
See how your tax has changed over 5+ financial years. Visualise the impact of Stage 3 tax cuts and rate changes over time.
Tax Calculators
PAYG Withholding Checker
Check if your employer is withholding the correct amount of tax. Compare your payslip against ATO withholding schedules.
Employment
Bonus Tax Calculator
Calculate the actual tax impact of a bonus payment. See your marginal rate on the bonus and how much you'll take home.
Employment
Contractor vs Employee
Compare take-home pay as a PAYG employee vs ABN contractor. Includes GST, business deductions, self-funded super, and break-even rate.
Employment
Employer Cost Calculator
See the total cost to employ someone beyond gross salary — super guarantee, payroll tax, workers comp, and FBT estimates.
Planning
Salary Comparison
Compare two salary packages side-by-side. Different super rates, salary sacrifice, and frequencies — see which offer pays more after tax.
Planning
Tax Savings Optimiser
Auto-analyse your situation and get personalised strategies to reduce your tax — salary sacrifice, deductions, health insurance, and more.
Learn more
Income Tax Guides
In-depth guides to help you understand Australian income tax and maximise your take-home pay.
How Income Tax Works in Australia
Progressive taxation, Medicare levy, HECS repayments, tax offsets, superannuation, and PAYG withholding explained in plain English.
Australian Tax Brackets 2025-26
2025-26 resident and non-resident tax brackets, Stage 3 tax cuts, worked examples, and how marginal rates affect your take-home pay.
Medicare Levy Surcharge: Do You Need Private Health Insurance?
MLS income thresholds, surcharge rates, when private hospital cover saves you money, family thresholds, and the 2025-26 threshold changes explained.
Salary Sacrifice Guide: Tax Benefits Explained
How salary sacrifice works in Australia — pre-tax super contributions, concessional caps, novated leases, FBT, Division 293, carry-forward rules, and worked examples.
HECS-HELP Repayment Guide 2025-26
New marginal repayment system, thresholds and rates, indexation, the 20% debt reduction, voluntary repayments, and repayment income explained.
Stage 3 Tax Cuts: What Changed and How Much You Save
How Australia's Stage 3 tax cuts changed income tax from 1 July 2024. Before and after brackets, savings by income level, original vs revised plan, and the history of the three-stage tax plan.
Work-Related Tax Deductions: Complete Guide
Working from home (70c/hr), car expenses (88c/km), clothing, self-education, tools, phone and internet — with ATO rates, record-keeping rules, and common mistakes.
Tax Offsets Explained: LITO, SAPTO & More
How Australian tax offsets work — LITO phase-out rates, SAPTO eligibility and thresholds, zone offsets, spouse super offset. How offsets differ from deductions, with worked examples.
Contractor vs Employee Tax Comparison
Side-by-side comparison of contractor (ABN) vs employee (PAYG) tax — take-home pay, GST, super, BAS, insurance, leave, and the break-even hourly rate.
First Job Tax Guide for Young Australians
Starting your first job? How to get a TFN, claim the tax-free threshold, read your payslip, choose a super fund, and lodge your first tax return — step by step.