When does your student debt actually disappear? Find out — with zero sugar-coating.
Sign in to my.gov.au, open the Australian Taxation Office linked service (link it once with your TFN if you haven't), and go to Loan accounts. Your current HECS-HELP balance is shown there along with the indexation history and all prior compulsory and voluntary repayments. Without a myGov account, call the ATO on 13 28 61 (Mon–Fri, 8am–6pm) with your TFN — they can read your balance over the phone. Your most recent Notice of Assessment also shows the indexed opening balance for the current financial year.
You start making compulsory repayments through the tax system once your Repayment Income exceeds the minimum threshold — $54,435 for the 2025-26 financial year. Repayment Income is broader than taxable income: it adds reportable fringe benefits, reportable employer super contributions, and net investment losses. Repayments are calculated as a percentage of your total Repayment Income (not just the amount above the threshold), which creates the 'HECS cliff' where earning $1 over a threshold can cost hundreds of dollars in extra repayments.
Indexation is applied once a year on 1 June, before that year's tax-time compulsory repayment is taken off. If your balance is $30,000 on 31 May and indexation is 3.2%, it becomes $30,960 on 1 June. Voluntary payments made before 1 June reduce the amount that gets indexed — paying $1,000 down on 30 May saves you the indexation on that $1,000. Compulsory repayments from your latest tax return don't reduce indexation in that same year because they're applied after lodgement, well after 1 June.
HECS-HELP debts are indexed annually on 1 June. Since 2023, indexation is capped at the lower of CPI or the Wage Price Index (WPI), and the cap was applied retroactively to balances from 2023 onward — a change that benefitted anyone who held a balance over 2023 and 2024. The ATO publishes the rate before 1 June each year, set based on prior-calendar-year CPI/WPI figures. Recent rates: 7.1% (2023, before the cap, since revised lower); ~4% (2024, capped). Confirm the 2026 rate on ato.gov.au before relying on it.
Taxable income is what you pay income tax on. Repayment Income (used to calculate HECS) adds four items back in: (1) reportable fringe benefits — salary-packaged car, novated lease, FBT-included benefits; (2) reportable employer super contributions (RESC) — i.e. salary sacrifice into super; (3) net investment losses (negative gearing); (4) exempt foreign employment income. Most PAYG earners with no investment property or salary sacrifice will have Repayment Income ≈ taxable income. This is why salary sacrificing into super doesn't usually reduce your HECS bill — the sacrificed amount is added back in for the HECS calculation.
Yes — voluntary payments can be made any time through myGov/ATO via BPAY or direct credit. There used to be a 5% bonus for voluntary payments over $500, but this was abolished in 2017. Voluntary payments still reduce your debt faster and, more importantly, reduce next year's indexation if made before 1 June. There's no minimum or maximum amount. Voluntary payments don't replace your compulsory repayments at tax time — they reduce them only by lowering the balance the compulsory rate is calculated against.
Yes. When you apply for a home loan, lenders treat your compulsory HECS repayment as an ongoing monthly expense, reducing the loan amount you qualify for. Rough rule: at a 6% repayment rate on a $100K income, your HECS repayment is $6,000/year ($500/month) — which can reduce your maximum borrowing by $80,000–$120,000 depending on the lender's serviceability calculation. Paying down HECS therefore improves borrowing capacity, but it has to be weighed against the indexation savings and what else the money could do.
HECS-HELP debt is written off upon death. It does not pass to your estate, family members, or anyone else. It is also written off if you become permanently incapacitated under the Permanent Disability provisions — apply through the ATO with supporting medical evidence. There's no general hardship write-off for HECS, but the ATO can defer compulsory repayments for one year on application if making the repayment would cause serious financial hardship.
It depends on the indexation rate vs. expected investment returns, plus non-financial factors. If indexation is 3% and you could realistically earn 7% after tax in a long-term diversified portfolio, the math favours investing. However: (1) reducing HECS improves borrowing capacity, useful if buying a home soon; (2) eliminates the 'HECS cliff' at threshold transitions; (3) provides psychological certainty. Common framework: prioritise paying HECS down only if you're about to apply for a home loan, you have no other debt, and your super is on track. Under the new lower-of-CPI-or-WPI cap, indexation is usually below the expected return on investing the same dollars.
Compulsory HECS repayments are a tax obligation calculated from your Repayment Income and cannot be refunded retroactively. Voluntary repayments can effectively go below zero balance (you'd have to actively overpay), and the ATO refunds any credit on your HECS-HELP account once the balance is fully paid off. If your final compulsory repayment over-pays your remaining balance, the excess is automatically refunded with your tax return that year — no separate claim needed.
Your current HECS-HELP balance is displayed in myGov once you've linked the ATO online service:
Don't have a myGov account? You can also call the ATO on 13 28 61 (Monday to Friday, 8am–6pm) with your Tax File Number to request a balance, or check the most recent Notice of Assessment from your last tax return — it shows your indexed opening balance for the current year.
Source: ATO — “Check and update your HELP debt” (ato.gov.au).
Your HECS-HELP balance is indexed once a year on 1 June, before that year's compulsory repayment is applied. Since 2023, indexation is capped at the lower of CPI or the Wage Price Index (WPI)for the prior calendar year — a change that retroactively benefitted anyone who held a balance over 2023 and 2024.
What that means in practice: if your balance is $30,000 on 31 May and indexation is 3.2%, your balance becomes $30,960 on 1 June — before your tax-time compulsory repayment is taken off. Voluntary repayments made before 1 June reduce the amount that gets indexed.
Source: ATO — “Study and training loan indexation rates”.
Get personalised AI-powered financial insights. Free to download, no ads.
Download Richify — It's Free