With the revised stage 3 tax cuts now law, it’s a good time to understand how these changes will affect you and how to plan your taxes for the future more effectively. The new rates will apply from 1 July 2024.
For the current income year, an individual who earns $67,600 annually (the median income from the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data) will be expected to pay around $12,437 in income tax. With the new tax rates coming in for the 2024–2025 income year, assuming they earn the same amount, they will be paying $11,068 in income tax – a tax saving of around $1,369 for the year, or around $26 per week.
An individual who earns $98,176 annually (the average income from the latest average weekly ordinary time earnings data) will have an income tax bill of around $22,374 for the 2023–2024 income year. However, this will drop to $20,240 when the new rates come into force for the 2024–2025 year, leading to a tax saving of around $2,133 for the year, or $41 per week.
Similarly, an individual who earns $180,000 can expect to see a tax saving of $3,729 for the year, or $71 per week; they will pay income tax of $51,667 for 2023–2024 versus $47,938 in 2024–2025.
These revised tax cuts were introduced as a cost-of-living relief measure by the government to put more money back in the pockets of Australian workers so they can deal with recent skyrocketing inflation. By also giving a proportional tax cut to working holiday makers and foreign residents the government is banking on more spending from that segment which will boost the economy overall.
In association with the revised income tax cuts, the government has also lifted low-income Medicare levy thresholds for eligible singles, families, seniors and pensioners to apply for the current income year, meaning more low-income earners can avoid paying the Medicare levy of 2% on top of their tax, or will pay a reduced amount of levy.