đź“‹ PRACTICAL GUIDE

Personal Deductible Contributions Guide

How to contribute to super and claim a tax deduction (for self‑employed, contractors & employees)

Select a different year to see historical rates

Personal deductible contributions let you contribute to super from your own bank account and claim a tax deduction — giving you the same tax benefit as salary sacrifice, but without involving your employer. This is essential for self‑employed people and contractors, and useful for employees who want more control.

Quick Reference

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CC Cap

$32,500/year

Includes SG + salary sacrifice + deductible

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Tax in Super

15%

Contribution tax (generally)

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Required Form

Notice of Intent (must be acknowledged)

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EOFY Deadline

Contribution must be received by your fund

Key point: The contribution is counted in the year your fund receives it — not the day you hit “send”. Build in processing time, especially in late June.

Who Can Make Personal Deductible Contributions?

Almost anyone can make personal deductible contributions, including:

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Self‑Employed

Sole traders and business owners without employer SG

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Contractors

Independent contractors paid as sole traders

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Employees

Anyone wanting to top up beyond employer contributions

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Retirees

Those with investment or other income (if eligible)

Difference from salary sacrifice: Salary sacrifice is arranged through your employer (pre‑tax). Personal deductible contributions are paid from your own funds (after you receive income), then you claim a deduction on your return after lodging the Notice of Intent and receiving your fund’s acknowledgement.

Step‑by‑Step: Making a Personal Deductible Contribution

1

Calculate how much to contribute

Work out your maximum concessional (CC) contribution space:

  • CC cap: $32,500
  • Minus: employer SG received this year
  • Minus: any salary sacrifice contributions
  • Plus: unused caps from past 5 years (if TSB < $500,000)
2

Make the contribution

Transfer funds to your super fund via BPAY, direct deposit, or (if accepted) cheque.

Timing: To count for the current financial year, your fund must receive the contribution by . Many people aim for to allow for processing.

3

Lodge your Notice of Intent (NAT 71121)

This is the critical step. You must lodge the Notice of Intent to claim a deduction, then receive written acknowledgement from your fund.

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Download Form NAT 71121 Notice of Intent to Claim or Vary a Deduction
Open on ATO →
  • Complete all sections including the amount you intend to claim
  • Send to your fund (portal / email / post)
  • Wait for acknowledgement (keep it for your records)
4

Receive acknowledgement from your fund

Your super fund must acknowledge your Notice of Intent in writing. Keep the acknowledgement as evidence for your tax return.

Many funds issue acknowledgement within 2–4 weeks; some portals provide faster confirmation.

5

Claim the deduction on your tax return

At tax time, claim the deduction at:

  • D12 — Personal superannuation contributions

The deduction reduces your taxable income, which generally saves tax at your marginal rate.

Critical Timing Rules

Notice of Intent deadline

You must lodge your Notice of Intent before the earlier of:

  • lodging your tax return for that year
  • end of the financial year after the contribution year
  • rolling over or withdrawing the contribution
  • commencing a pension with those funds

Contribution receipt date

The contribution counts in the year it is received by the fund — not when you initiate the payment.

Late‑June payments can land in July if processing delays occur.

Example: Michael’s timing

What Michael does
  • 25 June 2026: Transfers $20,000 to his super fund
  • 28 June 2026: Fund receives the contribution âś…
  • 15 July 2026: Lodges Notice of Intent (NAT 71121)
  • 25 July 2026: Receives acknowledgement
  • Oct 2026: Claims $20,000 at D12
Why it works
  • The fund received the contribution before 30 June
  • The Notice of Intent was lodged before the tax return
  • Acknowledgement was received and retained

Dates shown are illustrative; always confirm your fund’s cut‑off and processing times.

Personal Deductible Contributions Checklist

âś… Before contributing

âś… After contributing

âś… At tax time

Common Mistakes to Avoid

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Forgetting the Notice of Intent

Without NAT 71121 and acknowledgement, your contribution is treated as non‑concessional — no tax deduction.

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Lodging your tax return first

Once your tax return is lodged, you generally can’t lodge a Notice of Intent for that year.

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Contributing too late in June

Payments initiated on 30 June often arrive in July and count for the wrong year.

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Exceeding the cap

Personal deductible contributions count towards your CC cap. Include employer SG and salary sacrifice when calculating.

Where to Next?

Need Help With Your Contributions?

Choose the path that fits your needs — learn at your own pace, get answers to specific questions, or work with an expert.

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