logo
1 July changes: minimum wage, Centrelink payments, parental leave, road fines and everything else coming for the 2025-26 financial year

1 July changes: minimum wage, Centrelink payments, parental leave, road fines and everything else coming for the 2025-26 financial year

The Guardiana day ago

A wage increase for low-paid workers, changes to superannuation and significant reforms to the pension are part of sweeping changes being made on 1 July.
The end of the financial year is typically when state and federal governments change a range of legislation, implementing new policies. This year there is a lot happening so let's take a look at the big-ticket items.
Good news for those on the bottom income line, the minimum wage will increase by 3.5%, to $948 per week or $24.95 per hour, based on a 38-hour work week. The changes are expected to impact 2.6 million and will apply from the first full pay after July 1.
The minimum amount of superannuation employers must contribute is also set to rise from 11.5% to 12%.
This will be the final increase in a five-year series of rises to the amount employers have to pay and will mean a 30-year-old earning $100,000 will have an additional $125,000 when they retire.
In addition to cutting 20% off student loan debts for 3 million Australians, the government will also increase the amount that people can earn before they are required to start paying back their loans to $67,000, subject to the passage of legislation.
The national disability insurance scheme will introduce a number of changes from 1 July as part of its annual pricing review. The changes will mean that the maximum rates providers can charge some NDIS participants will be lowered after the review found some limits were 'inflated' or 'out of step with broader market rates'.
For example, physiotherapy sessions have been reduced by $10 to $183.99 per hour. Maximum rates will also be made nationally consistent meaning some providers in jurisdictions will be increased – prices for psychology sessions have been standardised at $223.99 across all states and territories.
Other changes will include removing an establishment fee providers once charged participants for setting up their services.
Sector advocacy groups have criticised the changes, warning they will result in fewer services being available for participants in regional and rural areas.
In brighter news, disability support workers will get a 3.95% pay boost from July.
The pension rate is not going up but increased income and asset thresholds mean thousands more will be entitled to benefits and bigger payments.
From 1 July the thresholds will be adjusted to better keep up with inflation, with every couple who are asset-tested getting a $34.50 fortnight increase, with singles getting $22.50.
The asset cut-off point when the pension starts to be reduced has also been decreased from $481,500 for couples and $321,500 for singles to $470,000 per couple and $314,000 for singles.
Around 2.4 million Centrelink recipients will also see a small increase to their payments, as the regular indexation is applied to their income. This means that payments and thresholds will increase by 2.4%.
While any increase to the bottom line will be welcomed by those on the payments, advocates routinely say the high cost of living, including soaring rent, far outpaces the extra money.
There is good news for parents and carers born in the new financial year with the number of paid parental leave (PPL) paydays lifting from 110 to 120, or 24 weeks.
Parents will be able to claim the leave up to three months before their child 'enters their care'. This is a series of increases to the scheme which will see it progressively expand until it hits 26 weeks by 2026.
AI-powered surveillance cameras, that will be able to detect when drivers are holding or using their mobile phones, will now be used across the country.
There are also state-based changes. In NSW, for example, there will be harsher penalties if someone is found not wearing a seatbelt, as fines rise in line with the CPI increase of 3.2%. The state will start trialling average speed cameras for cars and motorcycles in two locations.
In Queensland, speed limits will be reduced in selected areas and traffic fines will increase by 3.5%.
Drivers in Victoria will now have to slow to 40kmh when passing roadside assistance vehicles, tow trucks or emergency response vehicles that are flashing their lights. In South Australia, this will be lowered to 25kmh on some roads.
Drivers in Western Australia will now face fines up to $700 for mobile phone use and over $1,600 for excessive speeding.
Households that are looking to install battery systems will be in a better position as the cheaper home batteries program offering a 30% discount on the purchase and installation kicks in.
Paid practical placements will start for some tertiary students studying teaching, nursing, midwifery, and social work. Eligible students will be able to access $319.50 per week while they're undertaking a placement.
Affordable access to life-changing treatment for cystic fibrosis will be expanded to more Australians with a change to the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme.
People living with rarer types of cystic fibrosis will pay a fraction of the price to access life-changing treatment under an expansion of the scheme.
People will now pay a maximum of $31.60 per script, or $7.70 if they hold a concession card.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Shock twist after park boss was sacked over her four-minute foul-mouthed rant - despite 21 years of 'unblemished service'
Shock twist after park boss was sacked over her four-minute foul-mouthed rant - despite 21 years of 'unblemished service'

Daily Mail​

time38 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Shock twist after park boss was sacked over her four-minute foul-mouthed rant - despite 21 years of 'unblemished service'

A gift shop manager will be able to keep her job after she was sacked following a four-minute verbal tirade where she swore at and 'humiliated' another worker. Helen Woodlock has worked for Parks Victoria for 21 years and manages the gift shop in the Dandenong Botanical Gardens. But her employer had fought to have her sacked after an incident with a staff member from the adjacent Café Vireya in August 2023. Ms Woodlock had decades of 'unblemished service' until she erupted at the café worker for leaving the site unattended while several customers waited to be served. Countless complaints had been made about the café to Ms Woodlock who shouted 'f***' upon entering the store to find it empty. Soon after, the café attendant showed up, Ms Woodlock said: 'Jesus Christ, what the s***'s going on? 'People have been waiting here for f***ing 45 minutes. People are asking for food. Where are you?' The café worker replied that he had walked to the nearby IGA to get more paper for the EFTPOS machine. Ms Woodlock told the staffer he'd been gone for an hour and customers had been waiting even longer. 'Do you know what? And again I am sorry to diss you in front of customers but I've got these people coming up and I want to look after them,' she said. 'We've walked around for perhaps thirty minutes. The other man walked in and I'm like "hello, hello". 'These are our customers into our gardens, and where are you? So yes, I am upset because this is our gardens.' The café worker then said: 'Can you please stop yelling at me?' Ms Woodlock told the attendant he needed to speak to his manager. The incident was then investigated following a complaint about Ms Woodlock from the cafe's operator, with the CEO of Parks Victoria proposing she be fired. Ms Woodlock to the matter to the Fair Work Commission (FWC), claiming her proposed termination was unfair. She argued she walked into the café because she had safety concerns due to complaints about service delays and a gas smell. The FWC rejected her arguments, finding that her actions were the 'hallmarks of bullying' and therefore warranted termination. 'The nature of this conduct was degrading and humiliating,' the Commissioner found. 'It amounted to abuse and mistreatment of (the café worker) in circumstances of a power imbalance caused by the group aspect of the behaviour.' Ms Woodlock then successfully appealed the findings. In considering Ms Woodlock's appeal, the FWC heard that after 21 years of unblemished service, she was given 'unsolicited praise' from customers and had glowing performance reviews. Ms Woodlock claimed her job was 'part of my identity', that she was remorseful, and personal issues like the recent deaths of her step father and father-in-law, along with a 'serious respiratory illness' played a role in her behaviour. The FWC bench found that the previous Commissioner had relied on an incomplete draft record of an interview of the attendant. The FWC bench said Ms Woodlock subjected the worker to 'brutal public humiliation'. But there were numerous and 'significant countervailing considerations in the team leader's favour'. 'What took place was an uncharacteristic outburst of frustration and anger lasting four minutes, which, as we have noted, was partly explained by the poor emotional state [the team leader] was in as a result of her personal circumstances,' the bench found. 'We are also of the view that the personal difficulties she was suffering were exacerbated on the day of the incident, as a result of the respiratory illness that she was recovering from, the many incidents involving the café that she had been required to deal with over a lengthy period, and her distress at having to deal with angry customers of the café immediately prior to the incident.' It noted that while Ms Woodlock's conduct was serious, in their opinion 'dismissal is not disproportionate to the seriousness of her conduct'. 'We are satisfied that there is no risk of a repetition of the misconduct, and Parks Victoria will continue to receive the good service [Ms Woodlock] has provided for many years,' the bench found. It was also heard that the worker who was the subject of the abuse would suffer no unfairness from Ms Woodlock's continued employment because he no longer worked at the café. 'On the other hand, for [Ms Woodlock], the loss of her job would be a heavy, life changing penalty from which it is unlikely she would recover given that her prospects of gaining other employment are limited,' the bench said. 'In all of the circumstances, we consider that dismissal would be unfair.'

Immigration reforms for ‘complete reset' to be introduced in Parliament
Immigration reforms for ‘complete reset' to be introduced in Parliament

The Independent

time41 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Immigration reforms for ‘complete reset' to be introduced in Parliament

Legislation to end the recruitment of care workers from abroad is set to be introduced as part of a raft of immigration reforms. New rules to be laid in Parliament on Tuesday will also seek to increase salary and skills thresholds up to degree level for skilled workers, which will cut eligibility for 111 occupations. A new time-limited temporary shortage list will also be introduced until the end of 2026 for below degree level, where recruiting foreign workers is key to build critical infrastructure or industrial strategy. But those workers will no longer be able to bring their families and will not be entitled to salary and visa fee discounts. The legislative measures are the first policy changes to be introduced from the Government's Immigration White Paper to tighten controls and cut migration to the UK. Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: 'We are delivering a complete reset of our immigration system to restore proper control and order, after the previous government allowed net migration to quadruple in four years. 'These new rules mean stronger controls to bring migration down, to restore order to the immigration system and to ensure we focus on investing in skills and training here in the UK.' The changes, if approved by MPs and peers, will come into force from July 22. Further measures from the White Paper such as increasing English language requirements and raising the immigration skills charge are also expected to be in place by the end of the year. The White Paper is aimed at reducing numbers, clamping down on abuses of the system and ending a reliance on cheap foreign labour. Home Office estimates indicate that changes from the plan could reduce the number of people coming to the UK by up to 100,000 per year, when looking at eight of its proposals including on study and work routes and a higher level of English language requirement. But the move to scrap care worker visas has sparked concerns from the sector, with GMB national officer Will Dalton describing the decision as 'potentially catastrophic' as the care sector was 'utterly reliant on migrant workers' and still had more than 130,000 vacancies across the country. The Home Office believes there are 40,000 potential members of staff originally brought over by 'rogue' providers who could work in the sector while UK staff are trained up. Transitional arrangements for overseas care workers already in the UK have also been set out on Tuesday, according to the department.

Future of Keir Starmer's welfare reforms to be decided by MPs
Future of Keir Starmer's welfare reforms to be decided by MPs

STV News

time41 minutes ago

  • STV News

Future of Keir Starmer's welfare reforms to be decided by MPs

The future of Keir Starmer's welfare reforms are set to be decided on Tuesday when MPs will vote on the Prime Minister's Universal Credit and Personal Independence Payment Bill. Despite a significant U-turn last week, a Labour rebellion against the measures is still a possibility. Starmer was forced to yield to political pressure from within his own party after 126 Labour backbenchers signed their names to an amendment to halt the welfare reform legislation in its tracks last week. Among the rebels were nine Scottish Labour MPs. The Prime Minister's welfare reforms originally proposed to cut Universal Credit health top-ups for new claims from April 2026, and scrap the Work Capability Assessment (WCA). The reforms also vowed to review Personal Independence Payment (PIP) assessments and 'focus PIP on those with higher needs', while consulting on plans to delay access to the health top-up in Universal Credit until claimants turn 22. The cuts to Universal Credit would have directly impacted benefit claimants in Scotland, while the other changes would have impacted the amount of money coming to Social Security Scotland for devolved benefits, like Adult Disability Payments, which replaced PIP for Scots. The Scottish Government would have been responsible for making decisions about welfare and disability benefits based on its budget. However, Labour rebels argued the plans were rushed and would push vulnerable disabled people into poverty. After originally doubling down on the reforms, Starmer's government was forced to back-track ahead of Tuesday's crucial vote. Under the concessions, work and pensions secretary Liz Kendall said PIP claimants will continue to receive the benefits they currently get, as will recipients of the health element of Universal Credit. She said the planned benefit cuts will only hit future claimants. Campaigners have accused the latest proposals of creating a two-tier benefits system, and official government analysis released on Monday showed the reforms will still push 150,000 people into relative poverty across the UK, rather than the 250,000 first suggested. The U-turn will also leave UK chancellor Rachel Reeves scrambling to find £3bn due to the last minute U-turn. The concessions are believed to have won over the majority of the 120-odd MPs who had signed a wrecking amendment, but dozens of Labour MPs will still refuse to back the reforms on principle. The reforms will be put to a vote on Tuesday around noon. The House of Commons proceedings will be broadcast from the chamber. Get all the latest news from around the country Follow STV News Scan the QR code on your mobile device for all the latest news from around the country

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store