A $60,000 salary is $50,280 a year after income tax and the Medicare levy for the 2026–27 financial year — about $4,190 a month or $967 a week in take-home pay.
After tax, $60,000 works out to about $193 a day or $25 an hour, based on a standard 38-hour week.
~$118,927
Estimated maximum home loan on $60,000 a year, assuming typical living expenses (about $4,000 a month), a 6.5% variable rate and a 3% lender serviceability buffer over a 30-year term. Your actual borrowing power depends on your real expenses, debts and lender. Adjust for your numbers →
Add HECS, salary sacrifice, bonuses or change the tax year in the full calculator.
A $60,000 salary leaves about $50,280 a year after income tax and the Medicare levy (2026–27, resident claiming the tax-free threshold). That works out to roughly $4,190 a month, $1,934 a fortnight or $967 a week.
On $60,000 you pay about $8,520 in income tax plus $1,200 Medicare levy for 2026–27 — $9,720 in total before any HELP/HECS or surcharge.
No. Your employer pays superannuation on top of your $60,000 salary — about $7,200 for 2026–27 at the 12% super guarantee rate. It is not deducted from your take-home pay.
After income tax and the Medicare levy, $60,000 a year is about $25 an hour, $193 a day or $967 a week (2026–27), based on a standard 38-hour week over 52 weeks.
As a rough guide, on $60,000 a year with typical living expenses (about $4,000 a month), a 6.5% variable rate and a 3% lender serviceability buffer, a lender might assess a maximum home loan of roughly $118,927 over a 30-year term. Your actual borrowing capacity depends on your real expenses, existing debts and the lender.
See the take-home breakdown for $60,000 in previous financial years — including the years the low and middle income tax offset (LMITO) applied.
See the full income tax and take-home breakdown for common Australian salaries.
ATO rates checked against official sources — verified 3 July 2026
Estimates only. Not financial or tax advice. Full disclaimer for your rights and our limitations of liability.
Rates and thresholds last updated for the 2026–27 financial year.