Aussie cafe owner's 'pressure' of impending $124,000 superannuation change: 'Everyone's struggling'

Daniel McGowan and Lucky Cat Cafe
Daniel McGowan owns the Lucky Cat Cafe in Ipswich and said he'll feel the pressure from upcoming payday super changes. (Source: Supplied)

An Australian cat cafe owner says the introduction of payday super will “add another layer of stress” to his small business, which is already grappling with rising rents, wages and operating costs.

From July 1 next year, superannuation will be paid to employees at the same time as their salary and wages, rather than quarterly.

First announced in May 2023, the reform is aimed at tackling unpaid super and increasing the retirement savings of Aussies. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) estimates that $5.2 billion worth of superannuation went unpaid in 2021-22, while the government found a 25-year-old whose super was switched from quarterly to fortnightly could be $6,000 better off at retirement.

Daniel McGowan runs the Lucky Cat Cafe in Ipswich and employs three part-time staff members. The 37-year-old told Yahoo Finance he was speaking with his accountant about how he can meet the upcoming superannuation requirements. He may have to reduce the hours of his staff and work behind the counter more himself to make sure he can juggle the added "pressure" on cashflow.

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“I need to have that cashflow right here and now to put into the business to go straight into superannuation,” he said.

“I don’t think this is going to hurt staff in that they’re going to get less hours. But it is a consideration now, and I’ve spoken to them about it."

McGowan said he generally doesn't pay himself a wage from his business, or pay himself superannuation, as he also works in digital marketing and teaches at a university.

Lucky Cat Cafe lounge
Lucky Cat Cafe is a cafe and cat lounge that has rehomed more than 140 rescue cats. (Source: Supplied)

McGowan recently closed his Annerley cafe and has now shifted operations over to his Ipswich store and is in the process of building it back up.

“The way it is now is every single week is a new experience of, ‘Where am I going to get this money? How am I going to pay this? How am I going to pay that?’ It is a big struggle,” he said.

McGowan said rent was his biggest expense, eating into between 60 to 70 per cent of revenue. This was followed by wages, with wages increasing on July 1 in line with minimum wage requirements and the super guarantee increasing to 12 per cent.

The cost of goods has also been rising, with coffee bean prices “going up every single month". On top of that, McGowan said he had to close the shop for a week due to Cyclone Alfred earlier this year, and the shop experienced a break-in.