The Tyro Blog

8 April 2026 - 0 min read

Business Strategies

Payday Super is coming: What it means for your business and how to stay ahead

Summary 

  • Payday Super shifts super payments to payday  meaning SMEs must manage more frequent cash-flow outflows.  
  • Preparation + flexible funding like Tyro’s Flexi Loan could help businesses stay compliant and manage the change with confidence.  
  • Act before 2026  review your cash-flow strategy and financial tools now to stay ahead. 

 

From 1 July 2026, Payday Super will require employers to pay super contributions at the same time as wages, rather than quarterly.

The Payday Super legislation * is designed to help employees receive their super sooner and reduce unpaid contributions. While that’s positive for workers, it could changes the cash flow rhythm for your business. 

Here’s what you need to know to prepare.

 

What is Payday Super?

Today, most businesses pay super four times a year. 

Under the new Payday Super rules, employers will: 

  • Pay super at the same time as each pay run 
  • Ensure contributions reach employees’ super funds within days of payday 
  • Move away from the quarterly payment cycle 

This means super becomes a real-time payroll expense rather than a periodic liability. 

 

What Payday super changes mean for SMEs

Cash flow will feel different

The biggest change is timing. Instead of holding superannuation payments until the quarterly due date, funds will leave your account every pay cycle. 

For businesses with: 

  • Longer invoice terms 
  • Seasonal revenue 
  • Irregular cash inflows 
  • Growing headcount 

This may create short-term pressure between paying staff and receiving customer payments. 

Working cash flow buffers may shrink

Let’s be honest: for many SMEs, that quarterly super cycle acted as an unofficial cash flow buffer. It gave you breathing room to buy inventory or cover slow weeks. With Payday Super coming into effect, that buffer disappears.  

With more frequent payments: 

  • There’s less room to smooth expenses 
  • Forecasting becomes more important 
  • Payroll costs increase in immediacy 

Super effectively becomes part of your ongoing payroll cost rather than a future obligation. 

Compliance becomes ongoing

With superannuation tied to each pay run, deadlines become more frequent. 

Late payments may result in: 

  • Interest and penalties 
  • Additional reporting requirements 
  • Potential director liability 

The margin for error reduces,  so systems and processes will need to be reliable. 

 

How SMEs can prepare for Payday Super right now

Although Payday super is scheduled to begin from 1 July 2026, preparation is key.

Consider:

  • Reviewing your payroll software capabilities 
  • Strengthening cash flow forecasting 
  • Understanding your peak pressure periods 
  • Building a financial buffer 

Planning early can help avoid stress later. 

 

Managing the cash flow gap

Even with the best forecasting, there may be weeks where payroll is due, but your invoices haven’t cleared. You need a way to bridge that gap without taking on a rigid, traditional bank loan. For many businesses, the challenge won’t be profitability — it will be timing. You may need to pay wages and super before customers pay you. That’s where flexible cash flow can help. 

 

The Tyro Flexi Loan can help you manage short-term cash flow needs. 

Access funds in as little as 60 seconds ^

Eligible Tyro customers § can apply online and receive funds quickly. 

 One simple fixed fee 

Instead of interest that compounds over time, you pay a single fixed fee agreed upfront. 

 Repayments that flex with your sales. 

 This is the gamechanger. Repayments are a fixed percentage of your daily takings. Have a slow Tuesday? You pay less. Have a booming Saturday? You pay a bit more. It works with your cash flow, not against it. 

 Use funds your way 

Cover payroll, super payments, seasonal dips or unexpected expenses.  It’s a practical way to bridge the gap between outgoing payroll obligations and incoming revenue. 

 

To stay on top of your day-to-day cash flow, the Tyro Transaction Account helps you manage, track, and allocate your funds with ease. Create multiple accounts for different purposes — like setting aside super — while accessing the money you need to pay bills, order stock, and run your business with confidence. Plus, access your takings sooner with same-day settlements ¤, 7 days a week, even on public holidays. 

Together, it’s a practical way to bridge the gap between outgoing payroll obligations and incoming revenue. 

Take control of your cash flow

Explore the Tyro Flexi Loan and Tyro Transaction Account today.