How to Pay Yourself as a Director and Avoid This Expensive Tax Trap.
- January 31, 2026
- Samuel Jones
- 12:58 pm
You’ve finally done it. After years of refining your systems, countless late nights putting out fires, and doing everything you can to keep your NDIS business running smoothly, your business is finally profitable!
Now comes the big question: How do you actually take that money out of the business? Can you just withdraw it and start spending all haphazardly? Surely the tax man won’t mind… right?
It’s a common question, and one that most people will get wrong without deep research or seeking professional guidance.
So how do you get your hard earned money out of the business and start enjoying the fruits of your labour? Keep reading and we’ll breakdown 4 options which will keep you compliant (spoiler, the tax-man does mind).
Option One: Director Wages and Salaries
This is the most common and arguably the simplest method. The way it goes is you pay yourself a wage the same as you would with any other employee, which includes paying superannuation and PAYG withholding tax on your behalf.
- Its straightforward and easy to manage.
- The ATO likes this method because tax is paid throughout the year, therefore lower compliance risk.
- Useful when your business has consistent and predictable cashflow.
- You have less cash in the business because you’re paying withholding tax and 12% superannuation.
- You miss out on the benefit of paying tax at the 25% corporate rate and receiving franking credits (which is a WHOLE other topic we’ll have to discuss elsewhere)
For new NDIS Businesses. this approach may be problematic when cashflow is inconsistent. When an unexpected issue arises such as a delayed payment, disputed invoice or an unexpected expense, the business will still need to cover your wages and you may end up wishing hadn’t paid that super and tax so soon.
For established companies with a healthy cash buffer, paying director wages becomes more viable. However, even then, it’s not always the most common or tax‑effective approach. While it’s simple and keeps you compliant, it’s rarely the strategy that delivers the best long‑term tax outcome.
Option Two: Director Fees
Option Three: Dividends
Now, if we’re getting technical (which we are because us accountants love getting technical), dividends are paid to shareholders, not directors. However in most NDIS businesses, and most other private businesses in general, the directors and shareholders are usually the same person.
The risk comes about when directors take money out of the company and don’t pay it back, thus un-wittingly triggering the infamous Division 7A Provisions.
It really does depend on your situation. Please don’t take this as personalised accounting or tax advice. Please don’t read the final paragraph, assume it’s applicable to your business without consulting with an expert, get a negative tax outcome and sue me. I will refer the judge to this paragraph.
Although you have just read a very informative overview, there are still so many moving parts to consider when deciding what’s right for your business.
Now with that said…. dividends are generally best.
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