Labor’s much‑touted $1,000 instant tax deduction sounds like money in the bank, but it will work out to little more than a few dollars a week for most Australians.
The Albanese government said 6.2 million workers, about 42 per cent of taxpayers, would get cost-of-living relief from the proposed cashback.
It was introduced to combat bracket creep, in which inflation and wage rises push workers into higher income tax brackets that don’t change with inflation, so their purchasing power does not improve.
Treasurer Jim Chalmers said the policy is designed to simplify the tax system by allowing workers to knock $1,000 off their taxable income when they lodge their 2026–27 return, without needing to provide receipts.
‘This is about… delivering more lasting cost‑of‑living relief to taxpayers,’ the government said.
But AMP chief economist Shane Oliver told Daily Mail the policy was a lame duck.
‘It sounds big, but you don’t actually get $1,000 back, it’s not a $1,000 tax refund,’ Oliver said.
Under the reform, workers whose usual work‑related deductions are less than $1,000 can opt for an automatic deduction instead of itemising expenses.

Shane Oliver said the $1000 deduction was a lame duck at battling cost-of-living pressure

Anthony Albanese has not signalled any major reforms to income tax in the upcoming budget
For someone earning $100,000 a year, taxable income would fall to $99,000, meaning tax is paid on the lower amount. So the cash workers will actually save depends on their marginal tax rate.
‘For most people, once you work it out, the saving will only be a few hundred dollars a year,’ Oliver said. ‘Maybe $200, so around four dollars a week.’
Government figures show the average tax saving is $205, with women making up 3.3 million of the beneficiaries and receiving an average benefit of $200.
About three‑quarters of those who benefit earn less than $100,000, while nearly 1.7 million people under 30 are expected to gain roughly $200.
Workers who already claims more than $1,000 in work‑related deductions stands to gain nothing from the change.
‘A lot of people already deduct more than $1,000,’ Oliver said.
‘In that case, this is of no benefit at all. You’re better off doing your tax return as normal.’
The Government says charitable donations, union fees and other non‑work‑related deductions can still be claimed on top of the instant deduction, while higher‑deduction earners can opt out altogether.

Jim Chalmers said the $1,000 offset was designed to simplify the tax system
Critics argue that while Labor has pitched the measure as cost‑of‑living relief, it does little to counter the growing impact of bracket creep.
‘This just lowers your taxable income slightly,’ Oliver said.
‘It doesn’t stop people being pushed into higher tax brackets over time. Bracket creep remains.’
The new deduction also differs sharply from the old low and middle income tax offset, introduced under the former Coalition government and often dubbed the ‘Lamington tax cut’, which actually delivered up to $1,000 as a refund.
‘That was far more generous. It was an actual payment. This is a tax deduction, and a tax deduction means it comes off your income.’
Oliver said under the old system, workers could still receive the full benefit even if their deductions were small, but ‘this one works a bit different’ because it’s not helpful for those who already exceed $1,000 in deductions.
Deputy Liberal Leader Jane Hume claimed bracket creep had quietly become Labor’s strategy for repairing the budget.
‘With productivity weak and living costs rising, Jim Chalmers is relying on bracket creep to quietly push Australians into paying more tax,’ she told Daily Mail.

Jane Hume said that the government was relying on bracket creep for budget repair
‘Australians are paying more not because they’re better off, but because Labor’s home‑grown inflation is pushing them into higher tax brackets.’
Hume said Labor’s broader tax cuts were deliberately modest.
‘Labor’s answer is a tax cut worth about 70 cents a day in 2026, deliberately small because the government needs Australians paying more tax through bracket creep to keep the budget afloat,’ she said.
Oliver did acknowledged the reform would simplify tax returns for millions of Australians and reduce paperwork, particularly for lower‑income earners.
‘But it’s largely symbolic,’ he said.
‘It’s not a fundamental fix to the tax system and it doesn’t solve intergenerational inequity or bracket creep.’
Subject to legislation passing, the instant deduction will apply from 2026–27, with workers seeing the benefit when they lodge their tax returns in the second half of 2027.
Labor has also flagged potential changes to investment‑related taxes, including the capital gains tax discount, but has given no indication it will pursue significant income tax reform in the upcoming May budget.


