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Top HR Software in Australia 2026: An Employer’s Guide

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Quick Summary

  • Australia’s most-used HR software platforms in 2026 include Employment Hero, ELMO, Rippling, BambooHR, Deputy and Tanda
  • HR software automates payroll, rostering and onboarding — but cannot provide employment law advice
  • Award interpretation, unfair dismissal responses and Fair Work Commission representation require a qualified employment lawyer
  • Most Australian SMEs benefit from pairing HR software with a legal advisory membership for complete protection
  • Fair Work Centre membership starts from $118/month and includes 50+ HR document templates plus direct lawyer access

If you run a business with employees in Australia, someone has probably asked you whether you use HR software. Employment Hero, ELMO, Rippling and BambooHR have all grown significantly in the Australian market — and for good reason. These platforms genuinely help with payroll processing, rostering, onboarding and leave management.

But HR software has a hard limit: it cannot give you legal advice. Under the Fair Work Act 2009, every Australian employer carries direct personal obligations — and when something goes wrong, a dashboard notification won’t help you respond to a Fair Work Commission claim. This guide covers the leading HR software platforms in Australia, what they do well, and where you still need qualified employment law support alongside them.

Key Takeaways for Employers

  • HR software is a management tool — not a compliance or legal advisory service
  • Award classification errors are common when employers rely solely on software defaults
  • The 21-day unfair dismissal window means you need legal advice fast — software won’t provide it
  • Employment Hero is the most widely used platform in Australian SMEs as of 2026
  • Pairing software with a legal membership gives you both operational efficiency and legal protection

The Top HR Software Platforms in Australia (2026)

Here’s an honest comparison of the platforms most commonly used by Australian employers in 2026 — what they’re good at, who they suit, and what they don’t cover.

1. Employment Hero

Employment Hero is Australia’s largest HR platform by user count and has grown rapidly through its payroll engine (KeyPay) and an aggressive SME pricing model. It covers onboarding, contracts, leave management, rostering and payroll in a single platform. The platform includes some built-in contract templates, though these are generic and may not reflect the specific award or enterprise agreement applicable to your workforce. Best suited to businesses with 5–200 employees that want an all-in-one system.

2. ELMO Software

ELMO is a mid-market platform with stronger capability in performance management, learning and development, and succession planning than most of its competitors. It’s widely used in healthcare, professional services and larger SMEs. ELMO’s compliance modules cover standard HR policy workflows but stop short of employment law advice or award interpretation.

3. Rippling

Rippling launched in Australia with a US-origin product that integrates HR, payroll and IT management in a single platform. Its strength is automation — particularly useful for businesses that onboard and offboard employees frequently. Award interpretation remains a manual process within Rippling, and its Australian-specific employment law coverage is less mature than locally-built platforms.

4. BambooHR

BambooHR is a US-originated platform popular with professional services and technology businesses in Australia. Its interface is clean and user-friendly, with strong performance review and people analytics features. It is not designed for Australian payroll out of the box and typically requires integration with a local payroll provider. Better suited to businesses that prioritise employee experience tracking over compliance automation.

5. Deputy

Deputy specialises in workforce scheduling and time-tracking, with particularly strong uptake in hospitality, retail, healthcare and childcare — industries with complex award requirements and shift-based workforces. Deputy integrates with most payroll systems but does not provide employment law advice. Award rate updates in Deputy rely on manual configuration by the employer or their payroll provider.

6. Tanda

Tanda is an Australian-built platform focused on workforce management and time-attendance, with real-time award interpretation built into its compliance engine. It is widely used in hospitality and retail. While Tanda’s award compliance tools reduce underpayment risk, they still require the employer to have set up the correct award and classification at the start — an area where legal advice is valuable before setup.

7. Fair Work Centre — The Legal Advisory Layer

Fair Work Centre is not HR software — it is the employment law advisory membership that sits alongside your HR platform. Where Employment Hero, Deputy and Tanda automate the operational side of managing people, Fair Work Centre covers everything those platforms cannot: award interpretation, termination advice, unfair dismissal defence, and direct access to a dedicated employment lawyer.

Membership includes 50+ customisable HR and employment document templates (contracts, warnings, termination letters, redundancy notices, policies), access to a dedicated employment lawyer who knows your business, Fair Work compliance guidance, and Fair Work Commission representation for Advanced and Professional members. Plans start from $118/month — a fixed fee with no per-call charges.

Most Australian SMEs run HR software for payroll and rostering, then pair it with a Fair Work Centre membership for the legal and compliance layer that software cannot provide. The two work together — they don’t compete.

⚠ Important for Employers

HR software platforms update award rates when the Fair Work Commission makes a determination — but the employer remains legally responsible for ensuring the correct award applies to each employee from day one. Miscategorised employees are one of the most common sources of underpayment claims in Australia.

What HR Software Cannot Do for Australian Employers

Every platform listed above is a useful operational tool. But there are four things none of them can do — and all four matter directly to your legal exposure as an employer:

  • Interpret which modern award applies to a particular role in your business, or whether an enterprise agreement overrides it
  • Advise you on whether a dismissal is legally defensible before you proceed — and help you build a documented process that will hold up at the Fair Work Commission
  • Respond to an unfair dismissal or general protections claim filed by a former employee within the 21-day window
  • Review your employment contracts for clauses that may be unenforceable or inconsistent with the National Employment Standards

These are legal functions. They require a qualified employment lawyer — not a software dashboard.

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Choosing HR Software: A Practical Framework for Australian SMEs

When selecting an HR platform, the right choice depends on your industry, workforce type and the complexity of your award obligations. Here’s a simple decision framework:

  • Shift-based workforce (hospitality, retail, aged care): Prioritise Deputy or Tanda for award-compliant rostering and time-tracking
  • Office-based team (5–50 employees): Employment Hero or BambooHR for contracts, onboarding and leave management
  • Mid-market with L&D or performance requirements: ELMO for structured performance and training workflows
  • Multi-entity or tech-forward business: Rippling for integrated HR + IT management

For employment law compliance — regardless of which platform you use — pair it with a legal advisory service that covers the Fair Work Act, award interpretation, contracts and dispute response. HR software handles the administration. You need a lawyer for the law.

How Fair Work Centre Fits Into Your HR Stack

Fair Work Centre is not HR software — it is the legal and compliance layer that completes your HR setup. Most Australian SMEs run an HR platform for day-to-day operations and add a Fair Work Centre membership for the employment law side. The two work together: software handles rostering, payroll and leave; Fair Work Centre handles award interpretation, termination advice, contract reviews and dispute representation.

Capability HR Software Fair Work Centre
Payroll processing
Rostering & time tracking
Leave management
50+ HR & employment document templates Partial
Modern award interpretation & classification advice
Termination process advice
Unfair dismissal & general protections defence
Dedicated employment lawyer access
Fair Work Commission representation

A Fair Work Centre membership starts from $118/month and includes direct access to a dedicated employment lawyer, 50+ legally-reviewed document templates, Fair Work compliance advice, and representation at the Fair Work Commission for Advanced and Professional plan members.

If you manage employees under a modern award or enterprise agreement, want legally-reviewed employment contracts, or need someone in your corner when a dismissal is challenged — that’s what Fair Work Centre is built for.

For most Australian small businesses, Employment Hero is the most comprehensive all-in-one option — covering payroll, contracts, leave and onboarding in a single platform. Deputy is a strong choice for shift-based workforces in hospitality, retail and healthcare. The right platform depends on your industry, team size and the complexity of your award obligations.

HR software reduces the risk of payroll errors and helps automate compliance workflows — but it does not guarantee Fair Work compliance. The employer remains legally responsible for classifying employees correctly under the right modern award, ensuring contracts are compliant with the National Employment Standards, and managing terminations in accordance with the Fair Work Act 2009. Software cannot substitute for legal advice on these obligations.

Employment Hero provides tools to help manage compliance, including award rate updates and standard contract templates. However, it does not provide legal advice. Employers using Employment Hero are still responsible for ensuring the correct award applies to each employee, that contracts are legally sound, and that dismissal processes are procedurally fair. If you face a claim, Employment Hero will not assist you at the Fair Work Commission.

No — HR software and employment law advice serve different purposes. Software automates operational tasks like payroll, rostering and onboarding. An employment lawyer interprets awards, reviews contracts for legal enforceability, advises on dismissal risk, and represents you if an employee files a claim. Most employers benefit from using both: software for day-to-day management, and a legal advisory service for compliance and dispute matters.

Pricing varies significantly by platform and team size. Employment Hero starts from approximately $8–12 per employee per month. ELMO is mid-market, typically priced per module. Deputy and Tanda use per-user monthly pricing, generally $4–7 per user. Fair Work Centre membership, which covers employment law advice and HR documents, starts from $118 per month regardless of headcount — making it cost-effective for businesses of any size.

At minimum, every Australian employer should have: compliant employment contracts (full-time, part-time and casual), a staff handbook covering key policies, position descriptions, written warning templates, a performance review process, and termination letter templates. These documents need to be consistent with the relevant modern award and the National Employment Standards — generic internet templates often miss critical clauses.

Employees have 21 days from termination to file an unfair dismissal application with the Fair Work Commission. Once filed, the Commission sets a conciliation conference date — usually within 4–6 weeks. You need to respond with your position and supporting documentation. HR software will not help you at this stage. Fair Work Centre’s Advanced and Professional members can access direct legal support and representation throughout the process.

Industries with shift-based workforces, multiple award classifications and high staff turnover typically have the most complex HR software requirements: hospitality, retail, aged care, childcare, healthcare, construction and transport. In these sectors, payroll errors are common because award rates, penalty rates and allowances vary significantly by role and shift time. Both purpose-built workforce management tools and legal advice on award classification are strongly recommended.

HR Software + Legal Advice — That’s the Complete Picture

Fair Work Centre members get 50+ HR documents and direct lawyer access from $118/month. Speak to us about what your business needs.

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Disclaimer: Fair Work Centre is an independent private organisation providing advisory services to employers only. It is not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority. This article contains general information only and does not constitute legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, speak to one of our employment lawyers.
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