What the Recent Wage Review Announcement from Fair Work Means for Your Business
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Hello and welcome to Episode 327 of The People Powered Business Podcast.
Have you opened the latest wage review announcement and immediately wondered what it means for your payroll, your cash flow and your compliance obligations? If you're already feeling the squeeze of rising business costs, the latest Fair Work Commission decision may have you doing some quick calculations and asking what happens next. Based on the Fair Work Commission's annual wage review decision, significant increases are coming into effect from 1 July 2026, and every employer needs to be prepared.
I wanted to jump on the podcast this week with a timely compliance update because this is one of those changes that impacts a huge number of Australian businesses. Every year, the Fair Work Commission reviews the National Minimum Wage and award minimum rates of pay, taking into account economic conditions, inflation and submissions from unions and employer groups. This year's decision reflects ongoing cost of living pressures and rising inflation, making it one of the more significant wage increases we've seen in recent years.
In this episode, I break down exactly what the 2026 wage review decision means, including the increase to the National Minimum Wage and the separate increase to award minimum rates. I also explain who is most affected, what employers need to do before 1 July, and the common areas where businesses can accidentally fall short of their obligations. We also look ahead at upcoming Fair Work changes, including gender undervaluation reviews and major award updates that could have a significant impact on sectors like allied health, disability services and community care. If you employ staff under modern awards, this is one update you don't want to miss.
In this episode we cover:
- What the Fair Work Commission's 2026 National Wage Review decision means for employers
- The new National Minimum Wage and award wage increases taking effect from 1 July 2026
- How inflation and economic conditions influenced this year's decision
- Why you should review annualised wage agreements, flexibility agreements and allowances now
- Upcoming Fair Work changes affecting healthcare, disability services and other female-dominated industries
Links & Resources:
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What this episode covers
The 2026 Fair Work Commission wage review decision brings significant increases to both the National Minimum Wage and award minimum rates of pay. For small business owners employing staff under modern awards, understanding these changes is essential to remain compliant and avoid costly underpayment issues. This episode explains what has changed, who is affected and what actions employers need to take before 1 July 2026.
Key insight from this episode
Wage increases are only part of the compliance picture. Businesses also need to review annualised wage arrangements, flexibility agreements and employee allowances to ensure employees remain better off overall and that payroll practices continue to meet Fair Work requirements after the new rates take effect.
What you'll take away
- Understand the new National Minimum Wage and award wage increases effective from 1 July 2026
- Identify whether your workforce is likely to be affected by the updated award rates
- Know which payroll, allowance and wage agreement reviews should be completed before implementation
- Recognise the compliance risks associated with failing to update employee pay correctly
- Gain awareness of upcoming Fair Work changes affecting healthcare, disability and community service sectors