Super on a $300,000 Salary

Your employer pays $36,000/year in super on a $300,000 salary. Plus salary sacrifice options and retirement projections.

Last updated 1 July 2025 · Source: ATO — Super guarantee · Financial year: 2025–26 Current 2025–26
The Answer
$36,000/year
12% employer super guarantee on a $300,000 salary. $0 of concessional cap remaining for salary sacrifice.

Your Employer Super Contributions

PeriodSuper Contribution (12%)
Annual$36,000
Quarterly$9,000
Monthly$3,000
Per pay (fortnightly)$1,385

This is paid by your employer on top of your salary. It doesn't come out of your take-home pay (unless your contract says "salary inclusive of super").

Concessional Cap Space

Your employer's super guarantee uses $36,000 of your $30,000 concessional cap. That leaves $0 available for salary sacrifice or personal deductible contributions.

Projected Super at Retirement

If you stay on a $300,000 salary with 12% super guarantee for 30 years (assuming 7% average annual return, no salary sacrifice), your projected super balance would be approximately $3,639,000.

This is a simplified projection. Actual returns vary, fees reduce the balance, and your salary will change over time. Use a detailed calculator for personalised projections.

Is $300,000 Plus Super or Including Super?

This matters. "$300,000 plus super" means you get $300,000 in salary AND $36,000 in super — total package $336,000. "$300,000 including super" means the super comes out of the total, so your actual salary is $264,000 and super is $36,000. Always clarify this with your employer.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much super do I get on $300,000?

Your employer pays $36,000 per year (12% of $300,000) into your super fund. This is paid on top of your salary.

How much cap space do I have for salary sacrifice?

On $300,000, your employer uses $36,000 of the $30,000 concessional cap. You have $0 available for salary sacrifice.

How much super should I have at my age?

A common benchmark is 2x your salary by 40, 4x by 50, and 7x by 60. On $300,000, that means roughly $600,000 by 40 and $2,100,000 by 60. But everyone's situation is different.

What Changed

1 Jul 2025 Super guarantee rate increased to 12%
Last updated: 1 July 2025 · Source: ATO — Super guarantee · Financial year: 2025–26