On 1 July 2024, every Australian taxpayer earning over $18,200 received a tax cut. You have now received it for nearly two full financial years — close to $2,500-$5,000 in extra take-home pay depending on your income.

Most people don't know the exact number. The increase came through reduced PAYG withholding each fortnight — a quiet $30-$80 per week that the typical household absorbed into rent, groceries, and rates without flagging it as a windfall. As of 25 May 2026, here is exactly how much you have saved, why the savings vary so sharply by income, and what to do with the difference before EOFY 2026.

Australian payslip showing reduced PAYG withholding after Stage 3 tax cuts 1 July 2024
Stage 3 quietly reduced PAYG withholding from 1 July 2024 — the saving lives in your pay packet, not your tax return.

Sarah's saving: $2,554 a year, every year, automatic

Sarah is 36, a marketing manager in Brisbane earning $115,000. Her FY2023-24 tax bill (the last year before Stage 3) was $27,842. Under Stage 3 her FY2024-25 bill dropped to $25,288 — a saving of $2,554, or about $49 a week.

By 30 June 2026 — five weeks from now — Sarah will have received the $2,554 twice: once across FY2024-25 and again across FY2025-26. Total cumulative saving: $5,108. None of it required an application, a form, or a tax-agent visit. The ATO simply lowered the withholding rate her payroll software applies.

💡 The number to remember: if you earn between $135,000 and $180,000, your Stage 3 annual saving is exactly $3,729 — regardless of where you sit in that range. The 32.5% bracket disappearing affected every dollar of taxable income between $45,000 and $120,000 the same way.
Australian marketing manager working at laptop in Brisbane office calculating Stage 3 tax saving
Sarah's $2,554 annual Stage 3 saving — automatic since 1 July 2024 via reduced PAYG withholding.

Stage 3 vs pre-Stage 3 brackets, side by side

The pre-Stage 3 brackets (which applied to FY2023-24 and every prior year back to 2020-21) used four marginal rates: 19%, 32.5%, 37%, 45%. Stage 3 cut the bottom rate to 16%, removed the 32.5% bracket entirely, and pushed the 37% threshold from $120,000 to $135,000.

Bracket Pre-Stage 3 (FY2023-24) Stage 3 (1 July 2024+)
$0 – $18,200NilNil
$18,201 – $45,00019%16%
$45,001 – $120,000 / $135,00032.5%30% ▼ (range widened)
$120,001 / $135,001 – $180,000 / $190,00037%37% (threshold up)
$180,001+ / $190,001+45%45% (threshold up)

Verified against the ATO "Tax rates – Australian resident" page on 2026-05-25. Stage 3 brackets apply to FY2024-25 and FY2025-26 and continue indefinitely. The 16% bracket drops to 15% from 1 July 2026 under separate legislation.

Your exact saving by income (annual + cumulative)

The dollar saving plateaus at $4,529 per year for incomes above $190,000. Below $135,000 the saving scales steeply with income because each extra dollar through the old 32.5% bracket now flows through the new 30% bracket — a 2.5-percentage-point cut on a much bigger slice of income.

Gross income Pre-Stage 3 tax Stage 3 tax Annual saving 2-yr saving (to 30 Jun 2026)
$45,000$5,092$4,288$804$1,608
$60,000$9,967$8,788$1,179$2,358
$80,000$16,467$14,788$1,679$3,358
$100,000$22,967$20,788$2,179$4,358
$115,000$27,842$25,288$2,554$5,108
$135,000$35,017$31,288$3,729$7,458
$150,000$40,567$36,838$3,729$7,458
$180,000$51,667$47,938$3,729$7,458
$190,000$56,167$51,638$4,529$9,058
$250,000$83,167$78,638$4,529$9,058

Income tax only — excludes Medicare Levy (2%), LITO offsets at lower incomes, and MLS at $101k+ without hospital cover. The Stage 3 cut saving is identical in dollar terms regardless of those add-ons. Use Velofy's Tax Calculator to model your specific position including deductions and offsets.

Bar chart showing Stage 3 tax savings by income bracket from $45000 to $250000 plateau at $4529
Stage 3 savings plateau at $4,529/year for incomes above $190k — biggest percentage cut goes to incomes $60k–$80k.

Three smart moves with your Stage 3 saving (before 30 June 2026)

You have already received the FY2024-25 saving. The FY2025-26 saving is landing in your pay packet right now. Five weeks remain before EOFY 2026 to make the cumulative amount work harder than sitting in a transaction account.

1. Throw it into your mortgage offset (highest after-tax return)

For most homeowners on a standard 6.2% variable rate, every dollar in an offset account saves 6.2c per year in interest. A $5,000 Stage 3 saving parked in offset for the next 12 months saves $310 in interest — and that saving compounds because the principal balance falls faster. Plus the offset interest is effectively tax-free (you're not earning it, you're not paying it), unlike savings account interest taxed at your marginal rate.

2. Top up super before 30 June (second tax benefit)

A personal deductible super contribution of $5,108 (Sarah's two-year Stage 3 saving) at her 30% marginal rate triggers a further $1,022 tax refund in her FY2025-26 return. Inside super, the $5,108 is taxed at 15% — so the net contribution after super tax is $4,342, but the combined refund + super lift is worth roughly $4,342 + $1,022 = $5,364 of value from $5,108 deployed. Use the carry-forward concessional cap if your total super balance is under $500,000 at 30 June 2025.

3. Park it in a high-interest savings account (lowest friction)

The big four currently advertise 4.5-5.0% intro rates on high-interest savings accounts; ING, ME, and Macquarie offer 5.0-5.5% with bonus rate conditions. After 32% marginal tax on the interest (Stage 3 + Medicare Levy at the $45k-$135k bracket), the after-tax yield is roughly 3.1-3.7% — comfortably above current CPI inflation around 2.7%. Better than transaction-account default of 0.05%.

See your exact Stage 3 saving + best deployment

Enter your income into Velofy's Tax Calculator — it shows your Stage 3 tax under the verified 2025-26 brackets, your marginal rate for super-contribution math, and ranks the highest-dollar deductions you should also be claiming this EOFY.

Calculate My Tax → Free · ATO 2025–26 verified 2026-05-25 · No signup

Two myths that cost Australians money

⚠️ Myth 1: "Stage 3 only benefits high-income earners." This was the political framing of the original 2018 design. The 2024 Albanese revision halved the top-end benefit and redirected it downward. A $60,000 earner now saves $1,179 a year (1.97% of gross income); a $250,000 earner saves $4,529 a year (1.81% of gross income). The biggest percentage cut went to incomes between $60k and $80k.
⚠️ Myth 2: "I'll get a bigger tax refund because of Stage 3." Wrong direction. PAYG withholding rates were updated on 1 July 2024 to match the new brackets — so you receive the saving each fortnight through higher take-home pay, not as a year-end lump sum. Your refund size depends on the gap between withholding and final tax, which is mostly unchanged from FY2023-24 to now.

What changes from 1 July 2026

A further (smaller) tax cut is already legislated. The 16% bottom bracket falls to 15% on 1 July 2026 and to 14% on 1 July 2027. Bracket boundaries do not change. Annual benefit at common incomes:

  • $45,000 income: +$268 from 1 July 2026, +$536 from 1 July 2027 (vs FY2025-26)
  • $80,000 income: +$268 from 1 July 2026, +$536 from 1 July 2027 (same — the cut is on the first $26,800 of taxable income above $18,200 only)
  • $135,000+ income: +$268 from 1 July 2026, +$536 from 1 July 2027 (same)

The 1 July 2026 cut is also the date the superannuation concessional contribution cap rises from $30,000 to $32,500 — and the date payday super begins for all employers under 50 employees. Both effects compound the Stage 3 benefit for higher earners actively contributing to super.

Velofy Tax Calculator showing Stage 3 marginal rate breakdown for Australian income with PAYG withholding match
Velofy's Tax Calculator shows your Stage 3 marginal rate and how PAYG matches the new brackets — verified vs ATO 2026-05-25.

The detail nobody mentions: PAYG vs final tax

Employer payroll software calculates PAYG withholding using ATO withholding schedules updated each July. When Stage 3 landed on 1 July 2024, the ATO published new schedules on 12 June 2024 — most major payroll providers (Xero, MYOB, Reckon, ADP) auto-updated within the following two weeks. Workers paid before the update sometimes had one or two pay cycles at old withholding rates; the over-withheld amount returned in the FY2024-25 tax refund.

If you started a new job mid-2024 or your payroll provider was slow, check your year-to-date PAYG against the Stage 3 brackets in the table above. A material gap (more than $200) is worth flagging with your employer or claiming via your tax return.

Stage 3 Tax Cuts — FAQ

When did the Stage 3 tax cuts actually start?

1 July 2024. They have applied for the full FY2024-25 financial year and the current FY2025-26 financial year. As of 25 May 2026, you have received nearly two years of the cut. The original Stage 3 design (drafted in 2018, legislated in 2019) was modified by the Albanese Government in early 2024 to redistribute more of the benefit toward incomes under $135,000.

What are the Stage 3 tax brackets exactly?

Verified against the ATO "Tax rates – Australian resident" page: $0–$18,200 nil; $18,201–$45,000 at 16%; $45,001–$135,000 at 30%; $135,001–$190,000 at 37%; $190,001+ at 45%. The base amounts at each bracket boundary are $4,288, $31,288, and $51,638 respectively. These rates have applied since 1 July 2024 and continue for FY2025-26.

How much have I saved if I earn $80,000?

At $80,000 your annual Stage 3 saving is $1,679 compared to the pre-Stage 3 brackets. Over FY2024-25 + FY2025-26 (the two completed Stage 3 years) that is $3,358 already in your pay packet. The saving has come through reduced PAYG withholding each fortnight — most people never noticed because the increase in take-home pay was around $32 per week, which the typical household absorbed into general spending.

Why did the 32.5% bracket disappear?

The pre-Stage 3 system had a 32.5% bracket between $45,000 and $120,000. Stage 3 replaced it with a single 30% bracket between $45,000 and $135,000 — both a 2.5-percentage-point cut and a $15,000 widening of the bracket. Combined effect: every dollar earned between $45,000 and $135,000 is now taxed at 30% instead of 32.5%, saving up to $2,250 per year for someone exactly at $135,000.

Is another tax cut coming in 2026 or 2027?

Yes — already legislated. The 16% bottom bracket falls to 15% from 1 July 2026 and to 14% from 1 July 2027. The $18,200 tax-free threshold and other bracket boundaries stay unchanged. Maximum additional annual benefit is $268 at $45,000 income from 1 July 2026, rising to $536 from 1 July 2027 (vs FY2025-26). Source: Treasury Laws Amendment (Cost of Living Tax Cuts) Act 2024.

What's the smartest thing to do with my Stage 3 saving?

Three options ranked by RICE-style impact: (1) Add the saving to your mortgage offset account if you have one — at 6.2% interest, each $1,000 saves $62 per year. (2) Salary sacrifice the equivalent dollar amount into super — gets a second tax benefit at 15% inside super vs your marginal rate. (3) Park it in a high-interest savings account currently paying 4.5-5.5%. Spending it works too — the tax cut was always designed to support household cash flow.

Calculate your Stage 3 saving and EOFY deductions together

Velofy's Tax Calculator pre-loads Stage 3 brackets, your profession-specific deductions ranked by dollar value, and offset/Medicare/MLS adjustments — all client-side, no signup. Verified against ATO 2026-05-25.

Calculate My Tax → Free · ATO 2025–26 · 100% private

Sources verified for this article (25 May 2026)