HECS-HELP repayment calculator

This calculator estimates your compulsory HECS/HELP repayment for 2026-27 and shows 2025-26 and 2024-25 side by side, so you can see how the change to a marginal system affects you. Enter your income and it applies each year's thresholds and rates. On $85,000, for example, the repayment was $3,825 under the 2024-25 flat system, $2,700 in 2025-26 and $2,321 in 2026-27. It works out repayments only. Your take-home pay is estimated on the pay pages. Figures are estimates based on ATO datasets, not advice.

HECS/HELP repayment calculator

$2,321 compulsory repayment, 2026–27
YearSystemRepayment on this income
2024–25Flat % of total income$3,825
2025–26Marginal (on income above threshold)$2,700
2026–27Marginal (on income above threshold)$2,321

Repayment income = taxable income plus reportable fringe benefits, reportable super contributions, net investment losses and exempt foreign income. For a plain salary it equals your salary. Estimates from dated ATO datasets, not advice.

Repayments at a glance, three systems side by side

Repayment income2024–25 (flat)2025–26 (marginal)2026–27 (marginal)
$60,000$600$0$0
$85,000$3,825$2,700$2,321
$100,000$5,500$4,950$4,571
$125,000$9,375$8,700$8,321
$150,000$13,500$12,950$12,476

Full thresholds on the 2026–27 reference page. To see a repayment inside a full take-home breakdown, toggle HECS/HELP on any salary page, e.g. $85,000.

Frequently asked

Why compare three years?
The repayment method changed. 2024-25 used a flat percentage of total income. 2025-26 kept a threshold of $67,000. 2026-27 uses a marginal scale from $69,528. Comparing all three shows the direction for your income.
Does the 20% balance cut change my repayment here?
No. The one-off 20% reduction around 1 June 2025 lowered HELP balances, not the yearly compulsory repayment. This calculator works out the repayment from your income, so the balance cut does not change the figures shown.
Which income does it use?
It uses repayment income: taxable income plus reportable fringe benefits, reportable super contributions, net investment losses and exempt foreign income. For a plain salary, that equals your salary, so entering your salary is enough.