Every figure cross-checked against the ATO

Salary sacrifice with a HECS debt: the gross-up trap

Updated 13 July 2026 · FY2026-27 rates · Type 2 gross-up factor 1.8868

How a "tax-free" package raises your HECS bill

Salary packaging reduces your taxable income — that part is real. But for HECS, the ATO doesn't use taxable income. It uses repayment income, and packaged amounts come back into it as reportable fringe benefits, multiplied by the Type 2 gross-up factor of 1.8868.

The classic case — a health or NFP worker on $80,000 packaging the full $9,010 cap:

LineAmount
Taxable income after packaging$80,000
Reportable fringe benefits ($9,010 × 1.8868)+$17,000
Repayment income for HECS$97,000
HECS repayment 2026-27 (on $97,000)$4,121
Extra repayment caused by the package+$2,550

Worse: your employer usually withholds STSL based on your reduced cash salary, so the extra repayment often isn't collected during the year — it arrives as a tax bill in July. That's the "$2–3k out of pocket at tax time" story that fills the forums every year.

→ Put your own numbers in — the calculator shows the grossed-up amount and the exact extra repayment your package causes.

Related questions

Does packaging ever still make sense with a HECS debt?

Often yes — the income tax saved can exceed the extra HECS repayment, and the repayment isn't lost money (it reduces your loan). But you should decide with both numbers in front of you, not just the packaging provider's brochure.

What about a novated lease?

Same mechanism: the lease's fringe benefit value is grossed up into repayment income. Ask your provider for the reportable fringe benefits amount and enter it directly in the calculator.

Does extra super count too?

Salary-sacrificed super is added back as reportable super contributions. It's still one of the best tax moves available — it just doesn't reduce your HECS assessment base.

Can I avoid the tax-time bill?

Ask payroll to withhold additional amounts, or set the money aside yourself. The refund estimator shows the gap between what's being withheld and what will be assessed.

Sources: ATO — repayment thresholds and rates (repayment income definition)