Superannuation Discussion + market volatility

Also there is a super split capability from 1 spouse to another - called spouse super split.
You can split 85% of your concessional super to your spouse in any one financial year but the splitting occurs in the next financial year after the concessional contribution. The split does not change the concessional cap for both spouses. That means the receiving spouse can have their own concessional cap plus the split.
The receiving spouse must be 60-65 yrs and not retired.
This maybe something to consider doing but just checking and there appears there maybe an age limit.
 
appears there maybe an age limit.
Yes as I said above, the receiving spouse has to be 65 or less and working

Potentially if spouse is 64, you could split your concessional contribution from last financial year (2024-2025) and then in 2027 when spouse is 65 you could split the concessional contribution for financial year 2025-2026. But make sure the splits occur before their click over to 65

So potentially 2x 0.85 x 30,000 =$51,000 that spouse can receive on top of their own concessional super contributions. Your super balance reduces by same amount
 
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You can actually do one year of $120,000 (not a cent over that) in June, must hit her super fund by at latest June 30 2026, earlier to be sure. . That means it appears there. Then in July you can do the $360,000. Just make sure you are using exactly the right terms when you lodge it.

You cannot add to a pension super account, only an accumulating super account. So you need to make sure you don't convert all the super account into a pension one so you can keep adding to it.

This is what Chat tells me. Waiting on the damn accountant to get back to me.....
This seams to be the simplest method and least amount of work.
 
If income is $40K the tax is $3488
This means the total tax % is 8%
There is no tax advantage to salary sacrifice more concessional super in addition to employers contribution. as concessional super as concessional contributions are taxed at 15% at entry.

The spouse split is taxed via your super account first before it is split.
 

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