Tuesday 14 July 2026
Beta
The Daily Sydney

Sydney Local News · Every Day

finance

Sydney savers weigh super raids as tax bills mount

Financial advisers warn withdrawing super to pay tax debts can cost far more long-term than the short-term relief gained.

By The Daily Sydney · Published 28 June 2026

Listen in English · 2 min

How we reported this

Produced with AI assistance and reviewed against our editorial standards. Sources are linked where available. Spotted an error or need a correction? Contact [email protected].

Sydney savers weigh super raids as tax bills mount
Photo by Tara Winstead on Pexels

Sydney residents facing unexpected large tax bills are increasingly considering tapping their superannuation to pay the debt, but financial experts say it's probably the wrong move. According to smh.com.au, while it may seem tempting to use super funds for tax obligations, the long-term consequences can be substantial.

The issue is particularly relevant for Sydney's self-employed, contractors, and investors who may not have had enough tax withheld during the year. A significant tax bill can arrive without warning, and the temptation to raid super is understandable when savings are limited.

However, drawing on superannuation early to cover tax debts triggers tax consequences and permanently reduces retirement savings that could be worth considerably more over decades of compound growth. For Sydney workers in their peak earning years, this decision can significantly impact their financial security in retirement.

Financial advisers recommend Sydney tax payers explore other options first: payment plans with the ATO, drawing from savings accounts, or negotiating with their employer or clients for earlier payments. These alternatives preserve the long-term growth potential of superannuation balances.

Sources: smh.com.au.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

This article is general information only and is not personal financial or investment advice. Consider your own circumstances and seek licensed professional advice before making financial decisions.

Beta · AI-assisted · human oversight

Your newsroom. Shaped by you.

The Daily Sydney is in beta. AI may assist with research, summarising and drafting. Automated checks assess sourcing, accuracy and editorial risk before publication, and sensitive material is held for human review. Spotted something off, or want us covering a topic? Tell us. Your feedback is entirely optional and helps shape what we publish next.

The Daily Network · local news across AUS