The superannuation concessional contributions cap just rose to $32,500. Here’s how to make the most of it

A mature-aged couple high-five each other as they celebrate a financial win and early retirement.

The superannuation system just became a little more generous.

From 1 July 2026, the concessional contributions cap rose to $32,500, up from $30,000 in FY26. This has given Australian investors more room to make tax-effective contributions into superannuation.

Concessional contributions include employer super guarantee payments, salary sacrifice contributions, and personal deductible contributions.

All three count toward the cap.

What the extra $2,500 is actually worth

An extra $2,500 in concessional contributions per year might not sound significant.

However, over a long investment horizon, the maths adds up.

According to Pitcher Partners, an additional $2,500 per year contributed to super on a concessional basis, invested at a long-term return of around 7% per annum, could grow to approximately $37,000 over 10 years.

The tax benefit compounds that further: every dollar of salary sacrificed into super at 15% rather than at a marginal tax rate of 32.5% or higher is a permanent tax saving.

For a worker on a salary of $90,000 contributing the full extra $2,500 via salary sacrifice, the income tax saving is approximately $437 per year.

The non-concessional cap and bring-forward rule also increased

The cap increase does not stop at concessional contributions.

The non-concessional contributions cap also rose to $130,000 from 1 July 2026, up from $120,000.

For investors under 75 with a total super balance below $2.1 million, the three-year bring-forward rule now allows up to $390,000 in non-concessional contributions in a single financial year.

The transfer balance cap also rose to $2.1 million. This lifts the maximum amount that can be moved into a tax-free retirement income stream and gives retirees more room to shelter earnings from tax.

An important catch-up deadline that just passed

One critical change that came into effect this month deserves separate attention.

From 1 July 2026, any unused concessional contribution cap amounts from FY21 and earlier are permanently forfeited.

Investors who were eligible to carry forward unused amounts from 2020-21 and chose not to use them by 30 June 2026 have now lost that opportunity permanently.

Looking ahead, the five-year carry-forward window now runs from FY22 to FY27, giving investors with super balances below $500,000 the ability to catch up on contributions they missed in those years.

Two ASX shares that benefit from a growing superannuation pool

More money flowing into superannuation benefits the wealth management platforms that administer and invest those assets.

Hub24 Ltd (ASX: HUB) and Netwealth Group Ltd (ASX: NWL) are the two most direct ASX beneficiaries of this dynamic.

Hub24 delivered record half-year net inflows of $10.7 billion in 1H FY26. The company also upgraded its FY27 platform funds under administration target to $160 billion to $170 billion. This was driven by the consistent growth in Australia’s super pool.

Netwealth reached a record $125.6 billion in platform Funds Under Administration (FUA) in 1H FY26. Platform revenue climbed 25% on the strength of consistent inflows and sticky adviser relationships.

As higher contribution caps, payday super, and expanded parental leave contributions combine to drive more money into the system in FY27, both platforms are positioned to capture a disproportionate share of that growth.

Foolish takeaway for your superannuation strategy

The concessional contributions cap increase to $32,500 is modest in isolation.

However, over a decade or more of investing, the compounding impact of higher contributions at a lower tax rate becomes material.

For investors who are not yet using their full concessional cap through employer contributions and salary sacrifice, the first step is checking where you stand against the new $32,500 limit.

The second step is arranging any additional salary sacrifice through your employer before the end of the next pay cycle.

The post The superannuation concessional contributions cap just rose to $32,500. Here’s how to make the most of it appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor Mark Verhoeven has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended Hub24 and Netwealth Group. The Motley Fool Australia has positions in and has recommended Netwealth Group. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended Hub24. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.