Accrued leave: take a holiday or take the payment?
If retirement is on the horizon and you have a large amount of accrued leave, you may well be contemplating whether to take a big holiday now, or just take the lump sum payment when you retire. There are some tax, super and possibly social security implications you should consider.
.
Superannuation
You receive superannuation guarantee contributions from your employer on the pay you receive while you’re on holidays. However, no super guarantee is payable on payments of lump sum leave entitlements upon your retirement. You could increase your retirement savings by a nice little bonus by taking those holidays before you retire!
Taking a holiday now could also extend the time you can contribute to super.
If you’re aged 67 to 75 and are looking to contribute one last chunk of money to super after you retire, be aware of the “work test” that applies to claim a tax deduction for those super contributions. If you haven’t worked for 40 hours in a 30-day consecutive period in the financial year when you make the contribution, you don’t meet the work test that is required to claim a tax deduction for your personal super contributions.
However, there’s a once-off exception for people with less than $300,000 in super, which allows them to use the “work test exemption” from the prior year to make deductible.
By taking your holidays now (instead of taking your accrued leave as a lump sum payment), and clocking up 40 work hours in a month in the next financial year, you may be able to extend the time you have to contribute to super.
A lump sum payment of accrued leave is taxed in the year you receive it. When deferring retirement into a new financial year by taking leave, you may increase the cap for concessional tax treatment of employment termination payments like golden handshakes.
Additionally, you may have a lower marginal tax bracket in the new financial year, because you may have lower working income
If you’re looking to claim the Age Pension when you retire, a lump sum received on retirement won’t count towards the Centrelink income test, but it will be an assessable asset, depending on how you invest it. So taking that accrued leave as a lump sum could push some people over the assets limit to receive the Age Pension.
On the other hand, your pay while on holidays won’t be counted in determining whether you qualify for Age Pension after you retire.
In summary, taking leave can provide more super contributions, tax flexibility and additional leave accrual, while taking the entitlement as a lump sum at retirement may allow earlier access to social security and, in some cases, favourable tax treatment.
Speaking with your tax adviser about your personal situation, well in advance of retirement, can pay off in so many ways.
Acctweb
Hot Issues
- Bribery, brothels, breaches of confidence: ATO officer loses appeal against imprisonment
- Why Culture Matters (Even in Small Teams)
- How to detect and prevent elder abuse when advising older clients: RSM
- Div 296 must be considered ‘holistically’, IPA says
- Working out your Work From Home (WFH) expenses – 2025 Rules
- Accrued leave: take a holiday or take the payment?
- Franchising and Leasing: Legal Issues to Consider When Securing a Location
- Airplane Fuel Consumption Per Minute
- ‘Results in paying more tax’: ATO warns Australians against early super access
- Employee or Contractor ?
- Inherited assets: what you need to know about pre-CGT v post-CGT investments
- WHS and OHS Regulatory Update: August 2025
- HECS/HELP debt reduction Bill introduced
- Non deductibility of ATO interest charges for businesses
- How safe is your business from scams
- The biggest earthquakes in history : (1905–2025)
- What Terms Should I Include in a Capital Raising Term Sheet?
- Prepare for Div 296 now, accountants warn
- ATO, lawmakers demand urgent action as GST fraud skyrockets
- 5 things smart businesses do to stop copycats
- Do not trust myGov messages
- Regulations have changed for buy now pay later services
- Australian Taxation Office (ATO) warns about misinformation on super changes circulating online
- The rise and fall of the world’s largest economies | GDP Epic Battle (1560–2025)
- ATO hit list 2025 – Key Areas Under Review
- Why Succession Planning Matters for Privately Owned and Wealth Groups in Australia
- Benefits of a business plan
- Roles and Responsibilities in a Business Partnership
- Mixing business and pleasure? Be vigilant this tax season
- 30 June 2025 - Tax Checklist - Small (and Micro) Business
- 3 more GST fraudsters sentenced under ATO’s Operation Protego
- Evolution of Boeing - 1916 - 2025