$80,000 after tax: quick snapshot
This guide starts with one clear assumption set so you have a usable reference point before you personalise the result. The snapshot below assumes an Australian resident claiming the tax-free threshold, with no salary sacrifice, no reportable fringe benefits, no Medicare exemption and no HELP debt.
| Baseline deduction | Estimated amount | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Income tax | $14,788 | The main deduction under the resident 2025–26 tax table. |
| Medicare levy | $1,600 | Usually 2% once income is above the low-income threshold. |
| Medicare levy surcharge | $0 | Not triggered in the baseline assumptions. |
| Employer super | $9,600 | Shown separately because it is part of the employment package but not take-home cash. |
What changes the result fastest at $80,000
HELP debt
With HELP switched on under the new 2025–26 marginal system, the estimated compulsory repayment rises to $1,950. That pulls annual take-home pay down to about $61,662 under the same baseline assumptions.
Private hospital cover and MLS
At this income, a single person is still below the 2025–26 MLS threshold. With adequate cover selected, the estimated annual net becomes $63,612.
How to use this page well
Keep the salary fixed at $80,000, then change one setting at a time. The most useful sequence is usually HELP first, then private hospital cover, then salary sacrifice to super. That shows whether the net-pay difference is mainly coming from study-loan repayments, MLS, or a deliberate packaging choice.
A salary guide can only be a starting point. Bonuses, extra deductions, reportable fringe benefits, foreign residency, working holiday maker status and employer-specific packaging rules can all change the final number.
Compare nearby salary points
The shape of after-tax pay becomes clearer when you compare adjacent salary bands rather than viewing one salary in isolation.
Frequently asked questions
Is the snapshot for salary excluding super?
Yes. The quick snapshot treats $80,000 as salary excluding employer super, which is how many Australian pay comparisons are framed.
Why is there not one universal answer for $80,000 after tax?
Because the tax result changes when HELP, MLS, salary sacrifice, reportable fringe benefits or residency settings change.
Should I compare this with average or median earnings?
Yes. Salary benchmarks are useful context, but they answer a different question from take-home pay. Benchmark pages help you compare your package with broader ABS earnings data.