Date amended:
External
Policy

Income for the income test

In applying the income test, a person's gross ordinary/adjusted income whether from within or outside Australia, less any permissible reductions in respect of business income, is taken into account. If the person is a member of a couple, half of the combined income of the couple is taken into account, regardless of which member of the couple actually receives the income.     

 

Work bonus income and the income test

Where a person who receives service pension or income support supplement has reached qualifying age and they receive employment income arising from remunerative work undertaken as an employee in an employer/employee relationship, an income test concession (known as the Work Bonus applies.  

The concession also applies to self-employment and business income  generated from gainful work. Gainful work is work that involves personal exertion (active participation). 

Work bonus

Under the work bonus income test concession, the first $300 per fortnight of the person's fortnightly work bonus income is excluded from the income test. Pensioners assessed under the transitional rules will not be eligible for the work bonus.

Note: The $300 per fortnight income concession amount is not subject to indexation.    

 

Work bonus bank

The maximum work bonus bank amount is $11,800. 

Where a person's fortnightly work bonus income is less than $300 per fortnight, the person will accrue the unused amount of the $300  per fortnight income concession to a work bonus bank to offset their employment income in the future. The bank continues to accrue until it reaches the maximum allowable balance of $11,800.

 

 

Income test and the rate of service pension for non-war widow/widower-pensioners

    

VEA →

 

Ordinary/adjusted income free area

SCH6-E6 of VEA

 

VEA → (go back)

 

If the pensioner has ordinary income up to the ordinary/adjusted income free area,  the rate of their pension is the maximum payment rate. This assumes there are no other factors affecting overall payability, such as the assets test or compensation recovery. If the ordinary income is over the income free area, the pension rate is reduced. The income free area for a person who is not a member of a couple differ from that for a person who is a member of a couple. The income free area can also be increased for certain dependent children of the pensioner if the person is paid under the transitional rules.    

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Reference Library – Historical Pension Rates

PRH

 

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Income test and the rate of ISS or service pension for war widow/widower-pensioners

With only one exception, the maximum possible rate of ISS or service pension for a war widow/widower-pensioner is the ceiling rate (plus any rent assistance and remote area allowance payable). The exception applies to an ISS recipient with saved children.  In such a case dependent child add-on, and guardian allowance may be added to the ceiling rate.

If the person's income reduced rate is lower than both the assets reduced rate and the ceiling rate, the rate of the person's ISS or service pension will be the income reduced rate plus any rent assistance and remote area allowance payable.

No pension is payable if income is above the limit at which service pension/ISS ceases.    

 

Service pension and the reduction for ordinary income

    

 

Any ordinary income of the person or the person's partner, in excess of the ordinary/adjusted income free area, will reduce the maximum payment rate of service pension by 50 cents in the dollar. The result is the income reduced rate.    

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Assessment process for service pension

Section 9.1.2

 

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ISS and the reduction for adjusted income

Any adjusted income of the person or the person's partner, in excess of the ordinary/adjusted income free area will reduce the maximum payment rate by 50 cents in the dollar. The result is the income reduced rate.    

 



Transitional rules

Pensioners and ISS recipients who were in receipt of pension on or before 19 September 2009 are eligible to be assessed under transitional rules, if:

  • transitional rules will result in a higher rate of pension;
  • they have never been assessed under the standard rules; and
  • they have been in continuous receipt of service pension, ISS or a social security pension since 20 September 2009.

The requirement that the pensioner has never been assessed under the new rules, does not arise where the pensioner's entitlement is re-determined from a date prior to 20 September 2009.  Where new pension information is received and is effective prior to this date, the pensioner's right to receive the transitional rate is considered anew.

Once a pensioner or ISS recipient has been assessed under the standard rules they cannot revert to transitional rules. There is an exception to this to cover changes to pension as a result of entering respite care.     

 

Recipients assessed under transitional rules:

  • have their payment calculated using the transitional maximum basic rate (MBR),
  • have a taper rate of 40 cents in the dollar for the income test,
  • can still receive the additional income free area for children, and
  • do not receive the Work Bonus.