SortMe Money
Check the KiwiSaver line on your last payslip. Two numbers moved in April, assuming you were on the default 3%, and you didn't have to do a thing for either of them: your deduction is now 3.5% and your employer has to at least match it. On $80,000 that half-percent is roughly $7.70 a week out of your pay. What your employer adds looks like the same amount on paper. It isn't, quite, once tax gets involved — and the gap surprises almost everyone who goes looking for it. In this episode, SortMe Resident Money Writer Hugo Jonston walks through the KiwiSaver machinery underneath the April 2026 rate change — the employer contribution that shrinks in transit, the government top-up that quietly halved last year while nobody was watching, and the one particular flavour of employment agreement where the "employer's" share of this rise is actually being paid by you. None of it is hard to untangle; it just never gets explained in one place. SortMe Founder & CEO Carl Thompson: "Most people can tell you their salary. Almost nobody can tell you what their KiwiSaver is actually worth this month. That's why we put your balance next to your bank accounts and track it over time." In this episode: * What actually changed on 1 April 2026 — 3.5% default employee deduction, 3.5% minimum employer match (up from 3% since 2013), and 16- and 17-year-olds now included so a teenager on $8,000 of shelf-stacking collects $280/year they never had before * The next diarised move — 1 April 2028, default rate to 4% on both sides — and the temporary rate-reduction escape hatch in myIR (3–12 months at a stretch) that lets your employer drop to 3% too and costs you compounding later * Why the third row of the who-pays-what table trips people up — the government now pays 25c per dollar you contribute, capped at $260.72/year, requiring $1,042.86 of your own contributions by 30 June, with nothing at all above $180,000 taxable income * ESCT (employer superannuation contribution tax) — why the employer's 3.5% isn't what reaches your KiwiSaver account, worked through on $80k: $2,800 employer contribution, ~30% ESCT step, ~$840 to IRD, ~$1,960 into your fund * The "total remuneration" trap common in corporate NZ — one headline number with employer KiwiSaver included inside it, meaning the half-percent rise came out of your package and your take-home fell to cover it; the one-search fix on your employment agreement, and why your next salary review is the place to raise 2028 * Self-employed or contracting — no match and nothing automatic, but the government top-up doesn't care where the income came from; a lump before 30 June works as well as a weekly drip * The side-hustle-plus-salary structure that quietly works — the salary side carries the full stack, so give the side business a "retirement" line item alongside its software subscriptions * What to check this month in ten minutes — 3.5% on both payslip lines, an employment-agreement search for "total remuneration", the $180k income cliff, and whether the temporary reduction is worth it (your 65-year-old self would prefer it wasn't) * Where SortMe fits — KiwiSaver aggregated next to your bank accounts through Akahu, so your total balance is one tracked number over time instead of a payslip plus an IRD login plus a provider app that mostly pushes fund-performance notifications Read the full article: sortme.com/post/kiwisaver-employer-contributions-2026
25 episoder
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