Verified & sourced · Updated June 2026

How Superannuation Is Split in a Divorce or Separation in Australia (2026)

The Legal Desk · Editorial team, family law + personal injury + migration · Updated 11 June 2026 · How we rank · Editorial standards

This is general information, not legal advice. The official court for divorce and parenting matters is the Federal Circuit and Family Court. Free help: the Family Relationship Advice Line 1800 050 321, Family Relationships Online, and Legal Aid in your state.

How Superannuation Is Split in a Divorce or Separation in Australia (2026)

In Australia, superannuation is treated as property under the Family Law Act 1975, so it can be divided when a couple separates, but it is never split automatically and there is no 50/50 rule. You and your former partner either agree on a split and formalise it through consent orders or a binding financial agreement, or a court decides as part of the overall property settlement. A split does not turn super into cash: the amount stays locked in the super system until you reach a condition of release, and the trustee of the fund must be given at least 28 days notice before any splitting order is made. Confirm current court fees at the official source, as they are indexed each 1 July (the consent orders filing fee rose to $205 from 1 July 2025).

Verified against official Australian sources, cited in each section below. Figures current for 2026; rules and prices change, so check the linked source for the latest.

Key takeaways

  • Superannuation is counted as property in a family law settlement, but splitting it is optional, not mandatory, and there is no automatic 50/50 entitlement. The court looks at the whole asset pool, each person's contributions and their future needs, then decides what is just and equitable.
  • A super split does not give you cash. The split amount stays inside the superannuation system and is generally preserved until you meet a condition of release (such as reaching your preservation age), the same as any other super.
  • The trustee of the super fund must be given at least 28 days notice of any proposed splitting order before it can be made, whether by consent or by a judge. This is a procedural fairness requirement, not a formality.
  • There are only two ways to make a split binding: consent orders or a court order through the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia, or a binding financial agreement where both people get independent legal advice and each lawyer signs a certificate.
  • Time limits apply. You generally have 12 months after a divorce becomes final, or 2 years after a de facto relationship ends, to apply to the court for a property settlement (Family Law Act s44). After that you need the court's permission to proceed.
  • Super can be split as a fixed dollar figure (a base amount) or as a percentage. Some interests, including most annuities and certain plans, are 'percentage-only' under the Family Law (Superannuation) Regulations 2025.
  • A super split is tax-neutral at the time of the split, and capital gains tax rollover relief can apply, because the money simply moves from one super fund to another rather than being paid out.
  • From 10 June 2025, the law codified the four-step settlement process and requires courts to consider the economic effect of family violence (including financial abuse) where relevant. Court filing fees are indexed each 1 July, so the consent orders fee of $205 (from 1 July 2025) and other fees should be confirmed at the official source.

Super is property, but it is not split automatically

Under the Family Law Act 1975, superannuation is treated as property that can be divided when a married or de facto couple separates. It is dealt with as part of the overall property settlement, alongside the house, savings, debts and other assets, rather than in a separate process of its own.

Crucially, nothing happens to your super automatically. Getting divorced does not split your super, and there is no rule that says it must be divided equally. A split only happens if you and your former partner agree to one and formalise it, or if a court orders it. Many settlements involve no super split at all, for example where the parties offset super against other assets instead.

There is also no presumption of a 50/50 division. The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia weighs the entire asset pool, each person's financial and non-financial contributions (including as homemaker or parent), and each person's future needs, and then asks whether the proposed outcome is just and equitable. In some cases an even split of super is fair, in others it is not, for example where one person brought a large super balance into the relationship, or where one person has far less ability to rebuild super before retirement.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

How courts decide a property settlement (the four-step approach)

When a settlement is decided by the court, or negotiated in its shadow, the approach follows four broad steps. From 10 June 2025, the Family Law Amendment Act 2024 codified this approach in the Family Law Act so it is now set out in the legislation itself rather than only in case law.

The steps are:

  • Step 1: Identify and value the whole asset pool, including all superannuation interests, property, savings and debts.
  • Step 2: Assess each person's contributions, both financial (income, assets brought in, inheritances) and non-financial (homemaking, parenting, renovations).
  • Step 3: Consider each person's future needs, such as age, health, care of children, earning capacity and the disparity in each person's super.
  • Step 4: Stand back and check that the overall division is just and equitable in all the circumstances.

From the same date, the court must also consider the economic effect of family violence where it is relevant, and the law makes clear that economic or financial abuse can be a form of family violence. Both people also have an explicit duty to disclose all relevant financial information and documents to each other and to the court.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

The two ways to make a super split binding

A super split is only legally effective on the fund if it is recorded in one of two formal ways. An informal agreement, even a written one, will not bind the super fund trustee.

  • Consent orders or a court order: If you agree, you can apply to the Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia for consent orders that record the split. If you cannot agree, the court can make a splitting order after a hearing. The filing fee for an Application for Consent Orders rose to $205 from 1 July 2025 (fees are indexed each 1 July, so confirm the current figure).
  • A binding financial agreement (a superannuation agreement): You can deal with super in a private agreement, but for it to be binding each person must receive independent legal advice about the effect of the agreement, and each person's lawyer must sign a certificate confirming that advice was given. With a binding financial agreement you do not go to court.

Whichever route you choose, the trustee of the super fund must be given written notice of the proposed orders at least 28 days before you file the Application for Consent Orders or before the court hearing. The trustee is entitled to be heard and to object, which is why this notice period exists. This is called giving the trustee 'procedural fairness'.

One change worth noting: from 10 June 2025, the previous requirement to provide a separation declaration for agreement-based splits of larger interests was removed, because the underlying tax threshold (the low rate cap) stopped being relevant for this purpose from 1 July 2024.

Source: www.ag.gov.au

Payment split, flagging, or leaving it as is

There are three broad ways super can be dealt with in a settlement, and you do not have to split it at all.

  • Payment split: A defined amount or percentage of the member's super is allocated to the other person (the 'non-member spouse'). When implemented, that amount is usually rolled into a super account for the non-member spouse.
  • Flagging: If a member is close to retirement or the value is hard to pin down now, the parties (or court) can 'flag' the interest. The flag prevents the fund from paying out the benefit until the flag is lifted and the split is dealt with later.
  • Leaving it: You can agree that each person keeps their own super and balance the difference using other assets (often called 'offsetting').

When you do split by payment, you can use a fixed dollar figure (a 'base amount') or a percentage of the interest. Certain interests, including most superannuation annuities and some specified plans, are 'percentage-only interests' under the Family Law (Superannuation) Regulations 2025 and can only be split by percentage. A base amount cannot exceed the family law value of the interest, or the court will not make the order and the fund will not implement it.

Source: www.ag.gov.au

You need to value the super first (Form 6 and defined benefit funds)

Before any split, the super interest has to be valued. For an accumulation fund (the most common type, where the balance is simply what is in the account), the value is generally the account balance. For other interests, a formal valuation method may be required.

To get the information, an eligible person (a member, or their current, former or prospective spouse) can ask the super fund for details using the Superannuation Information Request, known as the FL Form 6 Declaration. The trustee must provide the information and is not permitted to tell the member that the request was made. The fund may charge a fee for supplying it.

Defined benefit and other complex interests are harder. These are valued using the methods and factors set out in the Family Law (Superannuation) Regulations 2025 and the related approval instrument, and they often need an actuary or other expert to calculate the family law value. This is one reason these settlements can take longer and cost more.

The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia publishes a Superannuation Information Kit with the Form 6 and instructions, which is a useful starting point if you are doing this yourself.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

A split does not give you cash, and it is tax-neutral

A common misunderstanding is that splitting super means receiving a cash payout. It does not. Splitting super does not change its character: the amount that moves to the non-member spouse stays inside the superannuation system and remains preserved until that person reaches a condition of release, such as reaching their preservation age and retiring.

The split itself is tax-neutral. Because the money rolls from one super fund to another rather than being paid out, there is generally no immediate tax for either person at the time of the split, and the tax-free and taxable components transfer in the same proportions as the original interest.

For self-managed super funds (SMSFs) and small funds, capital gains tax rollover relief can apply where assets are transferred to another complying fund to give effect to a payment split, so the split does not trigger a CGT bill on the way through. SMSFs add extra complexity though, because the same fund may hold both parties' interests and one person often needs to exit, which has its own compliance steps. Confirm the current rules with the Australian Taxation Office or a specialist adviser before acting.

Source: www.ato.gov.au

Time limits and the special rules in Western Australia

There are deadlines. Under section 44 of the Family Law Act, you generally have 12 months from the date a divorce becomes final, or 2 years from the end of a de facto relationship, to apply to the court for a property settlement (which includes any super split). After those periods you can only proceed with the other party's consent, or with the court's permission, which is granted only in limited circumstances such as hardship.

Property settlement (and super splitting) is a separate process from the divorce itself, and is usually sorted out before or around the time of divorce rather than after. Getting divorced does not finalise your finances.

Western Australia has historically been the exception. WA did not refer its powers over de facto couples to the Commonwealth, so for many years separating de facto couples in WA could not have their super split. That changed: since 28 September 2022, Part VIIIC of the Family Law Act allows separating de facto couples in WA to split superannuation in the same way as elsewhere. Married couples in WA were already covered. If your matter is in WA, check whether the WA Family Court rules and forms apply to your situation, as some procedures differ.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

What it costs and where to get help

The court component is relatively modest. The Application for Consent Orders filing fee rose to $205 from 1 July 2025, and the divorce application fee is separate again (substantially higher, with a reduced fee available for concession card holders and those in financial hardship). Court fees are set by federal regulation and indexed each 1 July, so always confirm the current amount on the official fees page before filing.

The bigger costs are usually professional ones. If you engage a lawyer to prepare consent orders, fixed fees commonly fall in the range of roughly $1,500 to $3,500 depending on complexity, and a binding financial agreement or a valuation of a defined benefit interest will add to that. The super fund may also charge a fee for providing information and for implementing the split. These figures are indicative and vary between providers, so get a written quote.

Because super splitting interacts with tax, valuation and the rest of your property settlement, it is worth getting tailored advice rather than relying on general information. An accredited family law specialist (each state and territory law society maintains an accredited specialist register) can advise on whether a split, an offset, or flagging best suits your circumstances. The Federal Circuit and Family Court of Australia website also provides free factsheets, the Superannuation Information Kit and consent order kits for people handling matters themselves.

Source: www.fcfcoa.gov.au

Common questions

How Superannuation Is Split in a Divorce or Separation in Australia (2026) — FAQs

Does getting divorced automatically split my super?

No. A divorce ends the marriage but does nothing to your super or your property. A split only happens if you and your former partner agree to one and formalise it through consent orders or a binding financial agreement, or if a court orders it as part of a property settlement. Property matters are usually dealt with separately from the divorce itself.

Is super always split 50/50?

No, there is no 50/50 rule in Australian family law. The court looks at the whole asset pool, each person's contributions, and each person's future needs, then decides what is just and equitable. Sometimes an equal split of super is fair, sometimes it is not, for example where one person brought a much larger balance into the relationship or has far less ability to rebuild super before retirement.

If my super is split, do I get the money as cash?

Generally no. A super split keeps the money inside the superannuation system. The amount allocated to you is preserved and stays in super until you reach a condition of release, such as reaching your preservation age and retiring, the same as any other super you hold.

Why does the super fund need 28 days notice?

The trustee of the super fund must be given written notice of any proposed splitting order at least 28 days before you file consent orders or attend the court hearing. This gives the trustee a chance to be heard and to object if the order would not work for the fund. It is a procedural fairness requirement, and orders made without it can be invalid.

How do I find out how much my former partner's super is worth?

You (or they) can request the information directly from the super fund using the FL Form 6 Superannuation Information Request and Declaration. The trustee must provide details such as the value of the interest and is not allowed to tell the member that the request was made. The fund may charge a fee. The court's Superannuation Information Kit contains the form and instructions.

Is there a deadline to apply for a super split?

Yes. Under section 44 of the Family Law Act, you generally have 12 months after a divorce becomes final, or 2 years after a de facto relationship ends, to apply to the court for a property settlement that includes super. After that you need the other party's consent or the court's permission, which is only granted in limited circumstances.

Can de facto couples in Western Australia split super?

Yes, now they can. WA was historically the exception because it had not referred its de facto powers to the Commonwealth, but since 28 September 2022, Part VIIIC of the Family Law Act allows separating de facto couples in WA to split super. Married couples in WA were already covered. Some WA Family Court procedures still differ, so check the WA-specific rules.

Will splitting super create a tax bill?

Generally no at the time of the split. Because the money rolls from one super fund to another rather than being paid out, the split is tax-neutral, and capital gains tax rollover relief can apply for self-managed and small funds. Tax may apply later when the super is eventually drawn down, on the normal rules. Confirm your situation with the ATO or a qualified adviser.

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