If You Work in a Dental Practice, Your Super Is About to Change

Lyn Carman • June 29, 2026

If you work in a dental practice - whatever your role in it - you've probably heard the words ‘Payday Super' floating around lately.


Maybe you've looked it up.  Maybe you haven't had the chance.  Either way, this one's worth understanding because it directly affects your pay, your super, and how well a potential employer looks after you.

Here's what you need to know, in plain language.


What's changing


Right now, your employer is legally required to pay your superannuation once a quarter.  That means your super contributions can sit unpaid for up to three months before they reach your fund.


From 1 July 2026, that changes.  Super must be paid at the same time as your wages, and it must land in your fund within 7 business days of payday — every pay cycle, with only a few narrow exceptions.  This is now law, not a proposal, so it's coming. 

(For a brand-new employee, the first contribution gets a little longer, and there's some leeway in genuinely exceptional circumstances.  For most people, most of the time, it's every payday.)

Why is this good news for you?


Quarterly super has always had a quiet problem.  It was easy for it to fall through the cracks - not always through bad intentions, but because three months is a long time for cash-flow pressure to get in the way.


Under the new rules, there's no gap.  If you're paid fortnightly, your super contributions are processed fortnightly.  If something goes wrong, you'll know within weeks - not three months later, when the damage is already done.


It also means more transparency.  You'll see your super landing regularly, which makes it far easier to spot if something isn't right.

What to check right now


Whether you're settled in a role or looking at what else is out there, a few things are worth making sure are in order:


Your super fund details are correct with your employer.  Wrong fund or wrong account number, and contributions can get delayed or lost - a compliance problem for them and a headache for you.


Your TFN is on file.  Without it, your contributions can be taxed at a higher rate.  Worth a check if you're new to a role or haven't updated your details in a while.


You know which fund your money's going to.  Under Payday Super, you still have the right to choose your own fund, and your employer has to honour that.  If you've never nominated one, now's a good time to think about it.

If you want to confirm any of this for yourself, the ATO's Payday Super pages are the source of truth - worth a look rather than taking anyone's word for it, including this article.


What this tells you about a workplace


Here's the thing nobody really talks about: how a practice handles payroll tells you a lot about how it runs everything else.


The practices that get this right - clean systems, accurate records, consistent processes - tend to be the ones where people feel looked after.  Not because super is the whole picture, but because it's a signal.  It means someone's paying attention to the detail.


So when you're weighing up roles, anywhere across the country, it's worth asking: does this practice have its payroll sorted?  Is super paid on time?  Are the records clean?


Those aren't small questions.  They're some of the most revealing ones you can ask - because a practice that's careful with your pay is usually careful with a lot of other things too.


The short version


From 1 July 2026, your super has to be paid every payday, not quarterly, and reach your fund within seven business days.  It puts more money moving through your fund more often, makes problems easier to catch early, and quietly raises the bar for how practices manage their people.


It's a good change.  And it's worth knowing about before it lands.

This is general information, not financial advice - for anything specific to your situation, check with your super fund, your employer, or the ATO.



At Lync Dental, we work with dental professionals across Australia, which means we get a close look at how practices actually run - including whether they've got the basics like this sorted.  If you're weighing up your next move and want to land somewhere that's genuinely on top of looking after its people, we're happy to help you find one.


By Lyn Carman June 29, 2026
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By Lyn Carman June 29, 2026
You finished your training. You're good at the clinical work - the hands on skills, the chairside, the things the course actually prepared you for. And then you started in a practice and quickly worked out that the clinical part was never going to be the hard bit. The hard bit is everything around it. The unspoken way this particular practice runs. Working out how everyone fits together, whose toes not to step on, which corners are fine to cut and which aren't, how to hold your nerve when the afternoon's running forty minutes behind and everyone's tense. None of that was in the qualification — whether your qualification took six months or eight years. Most of the time, nobody sits you down and explains it. You're just expected to absorb it, and to look like you've got it together while you do. So here's a question worth sitting with: how much of what you actually know about doing your job well did anyone teach you — and how much did you pick up alone, hoping you were reading it right?
Calendar reading “1 JULY 2026” beside a transparent box of coins with miniature people around it
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