Payroll tax in Queensland is a self-assessed tax that employers must pay if their total Australian taxable wages exceed the state’s threshold. It is administered by the Queensland Revenue Office, and employers are responsible for registering, calculating, lodging returns, and making payments themselves.
The tax is based on the total wages paid to employees, and the applicable rate depends on the size of the wage bill and whether the employer qualifies for regional concessions or is subject to additional levies.
In 2007, payroll tax rules were partly harmonised across Australia, so many rulings are consistent between states. However, because each state and territory administers payroll tax separately, there are still important differences. Employers must always check the specific rules and updates for the state in which they operate to stay compliant.
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If you employ people in Queensland and your taxable wages in Australia (including group wages if you are part of a group) go over the threshold, you must register for payroll tax.
You need to register within 7 days of the end of the first month when your wages (or group wages) exceed $25,000 a week, even if your total taxable wages for the year will be under $1.3 million.
If you are a tax agent or business representative, you can register on behalf of a business if you have the right authority.
Before registering, you need to know which type of employer you are. There are three categories:
To register, create and log in to a QRO Online account and complete the registration process there - QRO Online.
The discount applies to employers principally located in designated regional areas, provided that at least 85% of their taxable wages are paid to regional employees.
This incentive reduces the applicable rate to 3.75% for Australian taxable wages equal to or less than $6.5million and 3.95% for taxable wages more than $6.5 million.
This regional discount is not available for employers who pay more than $350 million annually.
The mental health levy is an extra charge on top of payroll tax and is unique to payroll tax in Queensland. The Queensland Government introduced it to help fund mental health services across the state. It applies only to larger employers.
The levy is worked out based on your total Australian taxable wages (Queensland + interstate wages) and applied proportionately to your Queensland wages that exceed the thresholds:
Adjustments
Your levy thresholds may change if you:
These adjustments are done automatically when you lodge through QRO Online. If your levy calculation comes to zero or a negative amount, you don’t need to pay it.
Payroll tax in Queensland applies to a broad range of payments to employees :
Employers must ensure all taxable components are accurately reported to avoid underpayment and penalties. For detailed information on which payments are considered taxable, non-taxable, or exempt from payroll tax in Queensland, please refer to the official Queensland Revenue Office guidance - Taxable wages for payroll tax - Queensland Revenue Office.
Taxable under certain conditions*
Employers must lodge periodic payroll tax returns throughout the year and an annual return at the end of the financial year. You may also need to lodge a final return if your status changes (e.g., business closes, stops employing, or changes group arrangements)
Below are the general frequencies depending on your annual tax liability.
Your lodgement frequency is reviewed after each annual return. You can request a change earlier, but you must keep lodging at your current frequency until the Queensland Revenue Office confirms the change.
At the end of the financial year, you must:
Important notes:
Click here to know further about lodging returns and payments - Lodging and paying payroll tax returns - Queensland Revenue Office
Businesses can be treated as one unit for payroll tax. This is called grouping.
When Grouping Applies
You may be grouped if:
Your company and another are related bodies corporate.
Employees work across multiple businesses.
The same people control two or more businesses.
A business has a tracing interest in companies.
A person belongs to two or more groups (merged groups).
Note that only one condition is enough for grouping.
What Grouping Means
The combined Australian taxable wages of all group members are counted to work out the payroll tax liability.
If a group must register, one member is nominated as the Designated Group Employer (DGE).
Each member lodges their own returns, but:
The DGE claims any deduction on behalf of the group.
All group members are jointly responsible for unpaid tax, penalties, or interest.
You are not grouped if you are a single business with one ABN, even if you employ in multiple states. In that case, you just declare your Queensland taxable wages separately from your Australian wages.
A deduction reduces the amount of payroll tax you need to pay.
Deduction Rules
You may claim a deduction if your annual Australian taxable wages are less than $10.4 million.
The maximum deduction is $1.3 million in wages (or $108,333 per month).
The deduction reduces by $1 for every $7 of taxable wages above $1.3 million.
No deduction applies once wages reach $10.4 million annually (or $866,666 monthly).
Groups and Deductions
Only the DGE can claim the deduction for the group.
If the group deduction is bigger than the DGE’s wages, the excess can be given to another registered group member.
The excess deduction is applied in full to one member at a time until it’s used up.
Adjustments
If your wages change during the year, your deduction changes too.
If you don’t employ for the full financial year, the deduction is adjusted proportionally.
Managing payroll tax in Queensland is more than just applying a percentage to employee wages. Employers need to understand how the rules on registration, grouping, deductions, levies, and reporting work in practice. Each of these areas affects when you need to register, how much tax you pay, and what returns you must lodge.
It’s important to keep an eye on your total Australian wages each month and act quickly once you cross the threshold. Make sure you register on time, lodge accurate returns, and claim any deductions or regional discounts you are entitled to. Using payroll software, regularly checking updates from the Queensland Revenue Office, and getting advice from tax professionals can make the process much easier. These steps not only help you stay compliant but also protect your business from penalties and unnecessary stress.