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Wage Theft Penalties in Australia: What Underpaying Employees Could Cost You

A Comprehensive Guide for Employers – by Atlas Lawyers (Employment Law Specialists)

Underpaying employees is no longer just a civil compliance issue in Australia — deliberate wage theft can now trigger serious criminal and civil consequences for employers. With reforms that commenced on 1 January 2025, the landscape of employment law has shifted significantly, placing greater accountability on businesses and directors to ensure proper wage compliance. This guide breaks down what wage theft is, how penalties are applied, and what employers must do to protect their business.

What Is Wage Theft?

In Australia, wage theft refers to the intentional underpayment of wages or employee entitlements, including:

Importantly, only intentional underpayments qualify as criminal wage theft — honest mistakes or inadvertent payroll errors that are genuinely accidental and quickly rectified generally do not attract criminal liability.

Criminal Penalties: Severe Consequences for Intentional Underpayment

From 1 January 2025, employers found to have intentionally underpaid employees can face criminal prosecution, with penalties that reflect the seriousness of the offence:

 For Companies (Body Corporates)

 For Individuals (Directors, Employers, Officers)

These penalties are designed to deter intentional misconduct, not penalise employers for rectifiable mistakes. The prosecution must demonstrate intentional conduct — that the employer knowingly or recklessly underpaid employees.

Civil Penalties: Still Significant Without Criminal Intent

Not all underpayments will result in criminal charges — employers may still face civil penalties even where intent is not established:

📍 Civil Penalty Framework

Civil penalties typically arise where underpayments are due to oversight or systemic errors, but nonetheless reflect a breach of workplace laws.

Small Business Considerations

The Fair Work Ombudsman has introduced the Voluntary Small Business Wage Compliance Code to provide regulatory flexibility for small employers (usually those with 15 or fewer employees):

However, civil remedies and compliance actions can still apply, so businesses must ensure salary and wage compliance even if they fall under this category.

Enforcement and Proceedings

Real-World Case Examples

While criminal prosecutions under the new regime are still emerging, enforcement through civil penalties continues:

How Atlas Lawyers Can Help Employers

Ensuring compliance with Australia’s complex wage and employment laws is critical to protecting your business. At Atlas Lawyers (Employment Law Specialists), we provide strategic legal services including:

Proactive legal support can make the difference between resolving an inadvertent error and facing potentially severe penalties.


Key Takeaways

IssuePenalty Risk
Deliberate underpayment (criminal wage theft)Up to 10 years’ jail, fines up to $8.25m (company) / $1.65m (individual)
Civil underpayment contraventionsMonetary penalties based on underpayment value and seriousness
Small business non-intentional underpaymentCompliance obligations remain — criminal prosecution avoided if Code met
Failure to remedy mistakesSignificant civil penalties and compliance actions

Final Thought

Wage theft laws in Australia are now among the strictest in the world. Employers must ensure payroll systems and compliance processes are robust, transparent, and aligned with the Fair Work Act. Intentional underpayment isn’t just a regulatory breach — it’s a criminal offence that could cost businesses millions and put directors behind bars.

If you have doubts about your wage compliance, speak to Atlas Lawyers today, expert legal advice can save your business from unnecessary risk.