Not Redundant

What to Do When You Lose Your Job in Australia

A plain-English guide to your rights, your money, and your next steps — updated for 2026.

Losing your job is one of the most stressful things that can happen. Whether you've been made redundant, let go without warning, or left on bad terms, there are things you're legally entitled to, deadlines you can't miss, and financial lifelines that many Australians don't claim. This guide covers all of it.

1. Your final pay — what you're owed

Your employer must pay everything you're owed when your employment ends. This typically includes:

Most awards require final pay to be processed within seven days of your last day. If you're owed money and it hasn't arrived, contact the Fair Work Ombudsman on 13 13 94.

2. Redundancy pay — what you're entitled to

Australia has statutory redundancy pay under the National Employment Standards (NES) — unlike New Zealand, where there's no legal entitlement. If your role is made genuinely redundant, you're owed severance based on your years of service:

Years of continuous serviceRedundancy pay
Less than 1 yearNil
1–2 years4 weeks' pay
2–3 years6 weeks' pay
3–4 years7 weeks' pay
4–5 years8 weeks' pay
5–6 years10 weeks' pay
6–7 years11 weeks' pay
7–8 years13 weeks' pay
8–9 years14 weeks' pay
9–10 years16 weeks' pay
10+ years12 weeks' pay*

*Reduces at 10+ years under the NES. Your enterprise agreement or contract may offer more.

⚠️ Important exceptions Small businesses (fewer than 15 employees) are generally exempt from paying NES redundancy. Casual employees, fixed-term employees, and those dismissed for serious misconduct are also not entitled. If you're unsure whether your redundancy is "genuine" under the Fair Work Act, get advice quickly — the clock is ticking (see section 4).

Tax treatment of redundancy pay

Genuine redundancy payments receive concessional tax treatment. A portion is tax-free based on your years of service, and the remainder may be taxed at a lower rate than ordinary income. The tax-free threshold changes each financial year — check the ATO website for the current figures. Make sure your employer codes your payment correctly, as the wrong coding can cost you thousands.

3. Notice periods

Under the NES, your employer must give you minimum notice based on how long you've worked for them:

Length of serviceMinimum notice
Less than 1 year1 week
1–3 years2 weeks
3–5 years3 weeks
5 years or more4 weeks

Over 45 with 2+ years of service? You're entitled to an additional week on top of the above. Your award or enterprise agreement may also provide longer notice periods than the NES minimums — check your contract.

Your employer can pay you in lieu of notice instead of having you work the notice period. Either way, you must receive the equivalent pay.

4. If you think you were dismissed unfairly — act within 21 days

If your redundancy wasn't genuine, or if you were let go and believe the dismissal was harsh, unjust, or unreasonable, you may have an unfair dismissal claim. You must lodge with the Fair Work Commission within 21 calendar days of your dismissal taking effect. This deadline is strict — extensions are only granted in exceptional circumstances.

How to lodge File Form F2 online at fwc.gov.au. The filing fee is around $87 (fee waiver available if you're in financial hardship). If you're unsure whether you have a case, lodge anyway and seek advice — you can withdraw later, but you can't lodge late.

Note: you need at least 6 months' service to bring an unfair dismissal claim (12 months if your employer has fewer than 15 employees). There's also a high income threshold — if you earn above $174,200 (2025–26) and aren't covered by an award or enterprise agreement, unfair dismissal may not apply. A general protections claim may still be available.

5. Centrelink — applying for JobSeeker

JobSeeker Payment is the main Australian Government income support for people who are unemployed and looking for work. As of March 2026, the maximum rate for a single person with no children is around $808 per fortnight (rates are indexed twice yearly — check Services Australia for the current figure).

Apply as soon as possible

Your payment start date is generally backdated to when you lodged your claim, not when it's approved. Don't wait until you need the money — lodge immediately. You can do this through myGov if your Centrelink account is already linked.

The waiting period

If you received a redundancy payment, Centrelink will apply a "liquid assets waiting period" and possibly an "income maintenance period" — meaning you may need to wait before payments start. The length depends on how much you received and your household circumstances. This can feel unfair, but it's worth lodging early to lock in your start date for after the waiting period ends.

Don't miss rent assistance If you're renting, you may be eligible for Commonwealth Rent Assistance on top of your JobSeeker payment — up to around $185 per fortnight. This isn't automatically added; you need to declare your rent when you claim or update your circumstances in myGov. Many eligible people miss this entirely.

Mutual obligations

To keep receiving JobSeeker, you'll need to meet "mutual obligation" requirements — typically job searching, attending appointments, or participating in approved activities. What's required depends on your situation. Your initial appointment with Services Australia will set this out for you.

6. Superannuation — can you access it early?

Super is generally locked away until preservation age (60 for most people), but there are genuine hardship provisions:

Also check that your previous employer has been paying your super correctly. Unpaid super is unfortunately common in Australia. You can check your super balance through myGov (linked to the ATO) and see if contributions from your employer match what they should have been paying — 11.5% of ordinary time earnings as of 2024–25, rising to 12% in 2025–26.

7. If you have a mortgage — pause or restructure

Most Australian banks offer hardship assistance to customers who've lost their job. Options typically include:

Call your bank's financial hardship team directly — don't go through general customer service. Under the National Credit Act, banks are required to consider genuine hardship applications. A repayment pause means interest still accrues, so it's worth asking your bank to model the long-term cost before you decide.

8. Tax — you're probably owed a refund

If you worked for only part of the financial year before losing your job, you've likely had too much tax withheld. Lodging your tax return early could mean a refund. You can lodge via myGov once the financial year ends (1 July). If your employment ended partway through the year, you may be able to lodge earlier — your employer will need to finalise your income statement in the ATO system first.

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9. Your first week — a timeline

10. Quick reference — key Australian numbers and links

Key contacts

Disclaimer: This article is general information only and does not constitute legal, financial, or tax advice. Entitlements depend on your personal circumstances, your award or enterprise agreement, and current legislation. Rates and thresholds change regularly. For advice specific to your situation, contact the Fair Work Ombudsman, a community legal centre, or a registered financial counsellor.