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‹ Australian HR Glossary

Wage theft

Fair Work and entitlements
What is wage theft?

Wage theft is the deliberate underpayment of employees' wages or entitlements. Since 1 January 2025, intentional underpayment has been a criminal offence across Australia under the Fair Work Act, alongside existing civil penalties.

What changed in 2025?

The Closing Loopholes reforms made intentional underpayment of wages and certain entitlements a criminal offence from 1 January 2025, with penalties for companies that can reach three times the underpayment amount, and imprisonment available for individuals in the worst cases. Criminal liability sits on top of the civil regime, which continues to apply to underpayments of any kind, deliberate or not.

Is an honest mistake wage theft?

No. The criminal offence requires intent; a payroll error is not a crime. But accidental underpayment still carries civil exposure, back-payment obligations and reputational cost, and "we didn't know" wears thin quickly when the cause is a payroll system nobody has audited against the award. Small businesses that follow the Voluntary Small Business Wage Compliance Code cannot be referred for criminal prosecution for unintentional underpayments.

Where do underpayments usually come from?

Rarely from someone deciding to underpay. The usual sources are structural: employees classified at the wrong award level, casual loading or penalty rates missed for irregular hours, annualised salaries that no longer cover the hours actually worked, and superannuation paid late. That is why underpayment keeps surfacing at large, well-resourced organisations; the failure is in systems and review discipline, not intent.

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Common questions

What should an employer do after finding an underpayment?

Stop the error, calculate and back-pay affected employees, and fix the source. For significant underpayments, self-reporting to the Fair Work Ombudsman and getting advice early materially changes how the matter is treated.

Does wage theft cover superannuation?

Unpaid super has its own enforcement regime through the ATO, and intentional underpayment of some entitlements falls within the new criminal offence. Treat super timing with the same discipline as wages.

General guidance, not legal advice. Entitlements depend on the applicable award, agreement and jurisdiction. Rules and figures current as at July 2026 and reviewed annually.