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Fair Work Centre — For Employers

Is Your Payroll Actually Compliant? Most Employers Assume Yes and Are Wrong

Award interpretation, record keeping and now Payday Super — payroll compliance has more moving parts than ever. Get expert advice before an audit or underpayment claim finds the gaps for you.

Australian payroll officer reviewing payslips and timesheets

Not a government body
Employer-side advice only
Direct lawyer access — no call centres
Fair Work Commission representation

The Problem

Payroll Compliance Failures Are Rarely Deliberate — But They’re Still Costly

Payroll obligations — record keeping, payslips and superannuation — are enforced by the Fair Work Ombudsman, with detailed requirements set out under the Fair Work Act 2009. Non-compliance can trigger penalties even where the underlying error was unintentional.

1

Record-keeping gaps

Employers must keep accurate time and wage records for 7 years. Missing or incomplete records shift the burden of proof onto the employer in any underpayment dispute.

2

Payslip requirements are stricter than most think

Payslips must be issued within 1 working day of pay and include specific mandatory details — errors here are a common, easily fixed compliance gap employers overlook.

3

Payday Super changes the compliance calendar

From 1 July 2026, superannuation must generally be paid on payday rather than quarterly — a major shift in payroll process that catches out unprepared employers.

4

Manual calculations compound errors

Overtime, allowances and loadings calculated manually or in spreadsheets are the most common source of small, repeated underpayments that add up to significant back-pay over time.

How We Help

Build Payroll Processes That Actually Hold Up

Fair Work Centre helps Australian employers audit and fix payroll processes across award interpretation, record keeping, payslips and superannuation compliance.

  • Audit current payroll processes against award and NES requirements
  • Review record-keeping practices for the mandatory 7-year period
  • Check payslip content and timing compliance
  • Advise on Payday Super implementation and transition timing
  • Identify and rectify historical underpayment risk
  • Build ongoing compliance checklists for your payroll team
  • Represent your business in Fair Work Ombudsman payroll audits

Key Facts Every Employer Should Know

7 years
Minimum period to retain time and wage records
1 day
Maximum time to issue a payslip after payday
1 July 2026
Payday Super start date — super paid on payday, not quarterly
6 years
How far back underpayment claims can reach

How It Works

Get Advice in Three Steps

1

Call or enquire

Call 1300 161 828 or book a free initial advice call to scope a payroll review.

2

Speak to a dedicated lawyer

We review your award coverage, payslips and record-keeping practices.

3

Resolve with confidence

Get a clear compliance plan and Payday Super transition roadmap.

Get Payroll Compliant Before Payday Super Arrives

A short advice call now can prevent years of back-pay exposure later.

Membership

Plans Built for Ongoing Employer Protection

Standard
$118/month
  • 50+ HR document templates
  • Payroll compliance checklists
  • Self-service HR resources

See Plan Details

Professional
$346/month
  • Everything in Advanced
  • Unlimited lawyer advice sessions
  • Fair Work Commission representation

See Plan Details

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

Payday Super requires employers to pay superannuation guarantee contributions on the same day as salary and wages, rather than quarterly, starting 1 July 2026. This is a significant process change for payroll systems and cash flow planning, and needs to be implemented before the start date.

Employers must keep accurate records of hours worked, pay rates, leave balances, superannuation contributions and termination details for at least 7 years. These records must be legible, in English, and readily accessible if requested by the Fair Work Ombudsman.

Payslips must include the employer and employee’s details, pay period, gross and net pay, any deductions, superannuation contribution amount, and the applicable pay rate. They must be issued within 1 working day of payment, even if the employee is on leave.

The Ombudsman can request records going back years and issue compliance notices requiring back-payment plus superannuation and interest. Poor record keeping alone can result in penalties, separate from any underlying underpayment found.

You can rectify underpayments proactively, and doing so — with proper back-payment and documentation — is treated far more favourably than being caught through a complaint or audit. Getting advice on how to structure a voluntary rectification protects your position.

Record keeping, payslip and superannuation obligations apply to employers of all sizes. Some entitlements — like unfair dismissal minimum periods — differ for small businesses, but payroll compliance itself is not scaled down for smaller employers.

No. Fair Work Centre is an independent private advisory service for employers. We are not associated with or authorised by the Fair Work Ombudsman, the Fair Work Commission, or any government authority.

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.

Free Initial Legal Guidance For Employers

Speak to an Employment Lawyer at Fair Work Centre

To change or request cancellation of your Client Membership, please email us with your request at: info@fairworkcentre.com.au.

Refer to our Terms of Service for changes or cancellation requests.

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Employers / HR Managers:  1300 161 828
Employees / Workers:  13 13 94

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