A typical Physiotherapist salary of $88,000 is $69,320 a year after income tax and the Medicare levy for the 2026–27 financial year — about $5,777 a month or $1,333 a week in take-home pay.
After tax, a $88,000 Physiotherapist salary works out to about $267 a day or $35 an hour, based on a standard 38-hour week.
About these figures: these are indicative national full-time averages (ABS Employee Earnings and Hours, Jobs and Skills Australia occupation data and relevant awards, cross-checked against industry salary guides (2025)), not a Fair Work award or enterprise agreement rate. Your actual pay depends on your employer, state, experience and any applicable award — check your payslip, contract or award for your exact entitlement.
Plug your exact salary into the full calculator for HECS, super and salary sacrifice.
The typical (median) full-time Physiotherapist salary in Australia is $88,000, which works out to about $69,320 a year after income tax and the Medicare levy (2026–27) — roughly $5,777 a month or $1,333 a week.
Nationally, a Physiotherapist typically earns around $88,000 a year full-time, ranging from about $68,000 entry-level to $115,000 for senior/experienced roles.
On a $88,000 salary, employer superannuation is about $10,560 a year on top of pay, at the current super guarantee rate.
Take-home pay is about $55,720 a year entry-level versus $87,680 a year for a senior Physiotherapist, after tax (2026–27).
See the typical salary and take-home pay for common Australian jobs.
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.