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Final pay

Payroll

15 May 2025 (Last updated 3 Dec 2025)

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Final pay is monies owed to an employee whose employment has ended.

Final pay includes the payment of outstanding wages, accrued entitlements such as annual leave and annual leave loading if applicable, and possibly other payments such as long service leave, payment instead of notice, and redundancy pay.

Most awards require you to give a departing employee their final pay within 7 days of their employment ending. Some awards and registered agreements may provide a longer timeframe. Others provide for a shorter timeframe.

Final pay is what an employer owes an employee when their employment ends. An award, employment contract, enterprise agreement, or other registered agreement can specify when final pay must be paid. If it does not, the best practice is for employees to be paid within 7 days of their employment ending or as per the next scheduled pay cycle.

Calculating final pay

An employee should get the following entitlements in their final pay:

  • Outstanding wages for hours they have worked, including penalty rates and allowances
  • Any accumulated annual leave, including annual leave loading if it would have been paid during employment and, if applicable, accrued or pro-rata long service leave – depending on the relevant state or territory legislation.
  • Payment instead of notice – if the employee is not working the notice period.
  • Redundancy pay.

Sick or carer’s leave is generally not paid when employment ends unless an award, contract, or registered agreement says otherwise.

Check award and pay rate

On termination, an employee should be paid any outstanding wages for hours they have worked, including penalty rates and allowances.

Ensure you know what Award applies to your employee and what classification they fall under, as this will provide the minimum pay rate for that employee. However, a registered agreement or employment contract may provide a higher base payrate.

Some final payments of entitlements are at the base rate of pay while others are at the employee’s ordinary pay, which is what they are usually paid for the hours they work, depending on the award, agreement, or contract. Most awards have a provision that explains what needs to be paid on termination, whether payment is at the base rate of pay or not, and when the final payment needs to be made.

Annual leave entitlements on termination

When an employee ceases employment, you must include all unused annual leave as part of their final pay. An employee must be paid at least their base rate of pay for the hours they ordinarily would have worked during annual leave up to 38 hours a week, unless their award, registered agreement, or contract provides a greater entitlement.

However, the base rate of pay generally does not include payments such as:

  • Penalties.
  • Allowances.
  • Overtime rates.
  • Bonuses.

Some awards, however, may require the ordinary rate to be paid out instead of the base rate. To be certain of the exact requirements for cashing out annual leave for an employee, it is crucial to refer to the criteria stated in the respective award.

It is important to note that the NES specifies that annual leave entitlements cannot be cashed out unless an award, registered agreement or contract permits it. The Fair Work Act 2009 states that if an employee is terminated and they have a period of untaken annual leave, they must be paid out what they would have been paid had they taken that period of annual leave.

This means that if the employee is entitled to payment of annual leave loading because of their award or enterprise agreement or contract, they would be entitled to payment of the annual leave loading over the unused leave.

However, some employees may receive an annual salary or an all-inclusive hourly rate incorporating annual leave loading, in which case it does not need to be paid separately. Whether annual leave loading is included in the salary amount or forms part of an hourly rate will usually be stated in the employment contract.

Check if sick leave needs to be paid

In most cases, you do not have to give a departing employee a sick leave payout.

There are, however, some exceptions to this rule:

  • An employee may be entitled to cash out sick leave during their employment if indicated in their award or registered agreement and if certain conditions are met:
    • An agreement is made in writing for the leave to be cashed out.
    • The employee has at least 15 days of unused paid sick or carer’s leave left after cashing out.
    • Employee is paid the full amount they would have been paid if they took the leave.

You are not required to cash out sick and carer’s leave if the employee does not meet the criteria above. There are, however, exceptions to this depending on the employee’s awards. Certain modern awards have specific provisions that may not fall within the conditions bulleted above.

Long service leave

Employees may be entitled to long service leave because of their applicable modern award or registered agreement, though generally the entitlement to long service leave is derived from the relevant state or territory long service leave legislation.

These laws set out:

  • How long an employee must be employed in the business before they can get long service leave;
  • How much long service leave (if any) is paid to the employee on termination.
  • How the amount of long service leave and the rate it is paid at is calculated.

Notice and redundancy

Notice of termination and redundancy pay form part of the National Employment Standards (NES) contained in the Fair Work Act 2009 which provide the minimum terms and conditions of employment for national system employees.

Notice

Whether an employee quits or is fired, notice is generally required. A notice period is the length of time that an employee or employer must give to end employment. Notice periods apply to employers and employees and are set out in their award, any enterprise agreement, contract of employment, or workplace policy, however, the NES provides minimum notice periods when dismissing an employee.

The minimum notice period an employer must give an employee is based on the employee’s continuous service i.e. the length of time they have been employed by the business. The service period does not include any periods of unauthorised leave or absences but does include authorised unpaid leave (e.g. unpaid parental leave).

Employment contracts can state a higher notice period due to mutual agreement- however cannot undercut or provide less notice in contract as the award or registered agreement may require.

Period of continuous service Minimum notice period
1 year or less 1 week
More than 1 year – 3 years 2 weeks
More than 3 years – 5 years 3 weeks
More than 5 years 4 weeks

Employees over 45 years old who have worked for the employer for at least 2 years get an extra week of notice.

Notice periods do not apply to employees who:

  • Are casual.
  • Are employed for a specific time or task (e.g. a fixed term contract) and that period or task is ending at the prescribed time.
  • Do seasonal work.
  • Are fired because of evidence of serious misconduct (i.e. engaging in wilful and deliberate conduct inconsistent with their continued employment, for example in theft, fraud or assault).
  • Have a training arrangement and are employed for a set period, or the length of the training arrangement (other than an apprentice), and the employment relationship is ending at the conclusion of the agreed period / training agreement.
  • Are daily hire employees working in the building and construction, or meat industry.
  • Are weekly hire employees working in connection with the meat industry and whose termination depends on seasonal factors.

Once an employee has resigned with notice or has been given notice of their employment ending, the notice period will run from the day after it is given to the day the employment ends. You may choose either:

  • Let the employee work out the notice period.
  • Tell the employee to leave early and pay them instead of notice.
  • Offer garden leave to the employee.
  • Undertake a mutual agreement to let the employee stop working or shorten the notice period.
  • Pay out the full notice in lieu.
  • A combination of the above is also possible.

If the employer pays out the notice period, the employee’s employment ends on the date that payment instead of notice is made. In that case, the employee doesn’t stay employed during the notice period (or continue to accrue entitlements, such as annual leave). If the employer doesn’t pay out any part of the notice period, the employee stays employed for the entire period. Employment can’t end on a date earlier than the day the notice is given.

When you calculate pay in lieu of notice, you should pay the employee what they would have been paid if they had been at work.

Be sure to include the following items as part of their final pay:

  • Overtime worked.
  • Penalty rates.
  • Long service (if applicable).
  • Loadings i.e. leave loading.
  • Monetary allowances.
  • Incentive-based payments and bonuses.
  • Any other separately identifiable amounts.

Deductions

An employee’s award, employment contract, enterprise agreement, or other registered agreement sets out:

  • How much notice (if any) the employee has to give when they resign.
  • When an employer can withhold money if the employee does not give the minimum notice period required.
  • Taking money out of an employee’s pay before it is paid to them is a deduction.

An employer can only deduct money if:

  • The employee agrees in writing and it’s principally for their benefit.
  • It’s allowed by law, a court order, or by the Fair Work Commission.
  • It’s allowed under the employee’s award.
  • It’s allowed under the employee’s registered agreement and the employee agrees to it.

Most awards say that in certain circumstances an employer can deduct up to one week’s wages from an employee’s pay if they do not provide the minimum amount of notice. Where an award allows this, an employer can only deduct pay from an employee’s wages under the award, not from other entitlements.

Even if the deduction is made by an award, registered agreement, or contract, an employer can’t deduct if:

  • It benefits the employer, not the employee, and the deduction would be unreasonable in the circumstances.
  • The employee is under 18 years of age and their parent or guardian hasn’t agreed in writing.

Redundancy

Redundancy is when an employer dismisses an employee because:

  • The employer doesn’t need the employee’s job to be done by anyone anymore.
  • The employer becomes insolvent or bankrupt.

If an employee is made redundant, they should be given the minimum notice period for their length of service as set out in the NES or a longer period if provided in their award, registered agreement, or employment contract. The employee can either work the notice period or be paid the notice in lieu if the employer prefers them not to work the notice period.

The notice period will run from the day after it is given to the day the employment ends. If the employer pays out the notice period, the employee’s employment ends on the date that payment in lieu of notice is made. If the employer doesn’t pay out any part of the notice period, the employee stays employed for the entire period.

Employees should be paid any outstanding wages, unused annual leave, and annual leave loading if applicable. They may be entitled to long service leave depending on their length of service and the circumstances under which their employment has ended.

In addition, an employee may also be entitled to redundancy or severance pay, depending on the circumstances, which may include:

  • The length of service of the employee.
  • The employee’s employment type (e.g. casual).
  • Whether employees are trainees or apprentices.
  • Whether they are employed for a specific time or purpose.
  • How many employees the employer has at the time of the dismissal.
  • The applicable award, registered agreement, or employment contract provisions.

If an employee is entitled to redundancy pay, the amount is determined by the length of the employee’s continuous period of service with their employer. Redundancy pay is paid at the employee’s base pay rate for ordinary hours worked. 

Period of continuous service Redundancy pay
At least 1 year but less than 2 years 4 weeks
At least 2 years but less than 3 years 6 weeks
At least 3 years but less than 4 years 7 weeks
At least 4 years but less than 5 years 8 weeks
At least 5 years but less than 6 years 10 weeks
At least 6 years but less than 7 years 11 weeks
At least 7 years but less than 8 years 13 weeks
At least 8 years but less than 9 years 14 weeks
At least 9 years but less than 10 years 16 weeks
At least 10 years 12 weeks

The team at Peninsula can provide expert advice on the final pay for your employees.Talk to our team today.

This article is for general information purposes only and does not constitute as business or legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. It does not take into consideration your specific business, industry or circumstances. You should seek legal or other professional advice regarding matters as they relate to you or your business. To the maximum extent permitted by law, Peninsula Group disclaim all liability for any errors or omissions contained in this information or any failure to update or correct this information. It is your responsibility to assess and verify the accuracy, completeness, and reliability of the information in this article.

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