The Upcoming Payday Super Changes: What You Need to Know
As of July 1, 2026, a landmark change in the superannuation system will take effect, requiring employers to pay super contributions at the same time as employees’ wages.
From 26 August 2025, the Right to Disconnect will officially extend to employees of small business employers. For larger organisations, this change has been in play since August 2024, but for smaller teams, where blurred boundaries and constant connectivity are often part of the culture, this will feel different.
This is not about banning after-hours contact altogether. It’s about balancing operational needs with employee wellbeing and making sure you can justify that contact when it happens.
Small teams often thrive on flexibility and fast response times, but that agility can create risk blind spots:
Left unmanaged, these patterns can breach the law and erode trust.
Myth 1: “I can’t contact staff outside hours anymore.”
False. You can still make contact, employees can refuse to respond unless it’s unreasonable for them to do so.
Myth 2: “If they’re on call, they can still ignore me.”
Not true. If an employee is on call or being paid overtime, they can be required to respond in line with award or agreement rules.
Myth 3: “If their contract includes ‘reasonable additional hours’, this doesn’t apply.”
Wrong. The right to disconnect still applies, whether refusal is reasonable depends on the situation, not just the contract.
Handled well, this change can strengthen, not weaken, your culture. Here’s how:
1. Co-create boundaries
Sit down with your team and map out when contact is expected, what’s urgent vs not urgent, and preferred channels.
2. Train for judgement calls
Managers need the skills to assess urgency and weigh it against personal circumstances.
3. Update your documentation
Policies, position descriptions, and contracts should align with the new rules and your agreed contact protocols.
4. Set client expectations
Communicate your team’s availability in proposals, onboarding, and signatures. Offer emergency escalation processes so you’re not relying on individual staff discretion.
5. Use it to tackle burnout
Research consistently shows that employees who can switch off perform better during work hours. This is a compliance win and a productivity win.
For small businesses, the Right to Disconnect is not about shutting down responsiveness, it’s about defining it. Get this right, and you’ll not only meet your legal obligations but also create a healthier, more sustainable way of working those benefits both your people and your clients.
The Right to Disconnect isn’t just a legal change, it’s a chance to define healthier boundaries, reduce burnout, and strengthen trust in your team. We’ll help you audit your policies, align your practices, and design a strategy that protects both your people and your performance.
Call us on 1300 406 005 or email info@performhr.com.au
“Boundaries don’t reduce commitment, they protect the capacity to deliver it.”
Everything you need to know.
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