Choice of Fund for employersMany employees now have the right to choose which superannuation fund or retirement savings account will receive their Superannuation Guarantee (SG) contributions. As an employer, you need to ensure that you meet your obligations to inform your employees of their options. There are four steps you can follow to meet your Choice of Fund superannuation obligations: step 1 – identify your eligible employees step 2 – nominate a default fund step 3 – provide a Standard Choice form to your employees step 4 – act on your employees’ choice
step 1 - identify eligible employeesYou only need to offer choice of superannuation fund to your employees if they are eligible. An employees is eligible for Choice of Fund if they are:
Choice of Fund generally will not impact upon employees who are:
An ATO fact sheet to help employers determine Choice of Fund eligibility for their employees is available at ‘How to determine if your employees are eligible’. more:>
step 2 – choosing a default fundEmployers must choose the workplace default fund for employees who don’t return a completed Standard Choice form. This is the fund into which you will make their Superannuation Guarantee (SG) payments. How do I choose the default fund?
Tip: An eligible ‘default fund’ is a complying superannuation fund that offers a minimum standard of life insurance cover. Download Health Super’s letter of compliance.
step 3 - provide a Standard Choice formYou have to provide the Standard Choice form to your new eligible employees within 28 days from the day they start working for you. for new employeesYou only have to provide a Standard Choice form to a new employee when they first commence employment. This means you are not required to provide a Standard Choice form to the same employee if they commence employment again. For example, casual or itinerant workers who you employ for busy periods or at the same time each year. existing and eligible employeesHowever, you will have to provide another Standard Choice Form to your eligible employees:
There is no limit to the number of times an employee can choose a superannuation fund. However, you have to act on only one choice every 12 months.
Tip: Details of your chosen default fund must be included in the Standard Choice form.
step 4 – act on your employees’ choiceUpon receiving a Standard Choice form from an eligible employee you must:
Subject to the above, you then have 60 days in which to enrol the employee in their nominated fund. The frequency of the contribution payments may depend on an industrial arrangement or requirements of the nominated fund. While contributions are normally required to be paid within 28 days of the end of each quarter, many funds and industrial agreements may require contributions to be paid on a monthly basis.
keep the necessary recordsYou must keep records showing:
Your Choice of Fund records must be in English and be kept for 5 years. If your records are not in a written form (for example, in an electronic medium such as magnetic tape or computer disk), it must be in a form that is readily accessible and easily converted into written English. understand the penaltiesIf you don’t meet your Choice of Superannuation Fund obligations, you may be liable for the choice shortfall charge. The choice shortfall is part of the Superannuation Guarantee charge. when will the choice shortfall charge apply?The choice shortfall charge applies where you have paid superannuation guarantee contributions to a complying fund for your employee, but not to the fund chosen by them. It may also apply if you have not given your employees a Standard Choice form in the required timeframe. how much is the penalty?The choice shortfall charge is roughly 25% of the contributions that are paid to the wrong fund capped up to $500 for a notice period per employee. how do you avoid the shortfall?To avoid the choice shortfall charge it is essential that you pay sufficient superannuation contributions to the chosen fund or, where no chosen fund exists, to the fund you identified on the Standard Choice form. what is the notice period?Your notice period for an employee will start;
A notice period will end once the Tax Office gives you written notice that the notice period for the employee has ended. A notice period can consist of multiple quarters. don’t provide adviceYou can only provide factual information to an employee about what Choice of Superannuation Fund is, your obligations, and how the employee can nominate a fund as their chosen fund. However, giving advice about which superannuation fund an employee should choose, or recommending that an employee combine (rollover) their superannuation into one account, is likely to be considered financial advice. Anyone providing financial advice is generally required by law to be licensed by the Australian Securities and Investments Commission. Source: www.superchoice.gov.au/employers |



