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Revealed: The 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia with salaries close to $500K

Revealed: The 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia with salaries close to $500K

Time Out8 hours ago
They say money can't buy happiness, but it definitely buys you freedom to live a comfortable, stress-free life. If your finances are feeling tight or you're considering a career change, it's time to study up. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) recently released a list of the highest-paying jobs in Australia – and the top gig is pulling in almost half a million a year on average.
The ranking is based on data from millions of Aussie tax returns, collected by the ATO during the 2022–2023 financial year. While the figures are slightly dated, it's still fascinating to take a sticky beak at what some people are raking in. Plus, the top ten spots haven't changed in recent years – so it's safe to say the highest-earning jobs in Australia are much the same in 2025.
It's no surprise that medical professionals dominated the top ten, with surgeons once again claiming the number one spot. During the 2022-23 financial year, Australia's 4,247 surgeons took home a whopping average of $472,475 a year – up $12,119 from the previous 12-month period. To put it in perspective, that's more than six times the national average taxable income of $74,240 across the same time frame. (The average full-time Aussie income soared past $100,000 in late 2024).
The second-highest earners in Australia are anaesthetists, with the 3,658 surveyed earning an average of $447,193 annually. They saw the biggest year-on-year increase of $16,000 and are hot on the heels of our top-earning surgeons. Other medical professionals included in the top ten were internal medicine specialists in fourth place ($342,457), psychiatrists in fifth ($286,146) and other medical practitioners in sixth ($259,802).
Financial dealers were the highest earners outside the medical field, ranking third overall with an average yearly income of $355,233. During the 12-month period, only 5,147 Aussies held this role – which, in simple terms, involves managing the finances of other wealthy individuals.
The highest-paying job with the largest number of Aussies in the role was chief executive officers and managing directors, who earned an average of $194,987 per year. Interestingly, this was one of only three jobs that saw a drop in average income compared to the previous year's tax data, along with financial dealers (down $18,500) and mining engineers (down $7,942). You can see the full summary below.
These are the 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia
Surgeon – $472,475 (up $12,119)
Anaesthetists – $447,193 (up $16,000)
Financial dealer – $355,233 (down $18,500)
Internal medicine specialist – $342,457 (up $1,728)
Psychiatrist – $286,146 (up $9,601)
Other medical practitioners – $259,802 (up $4,048)
Mining engineer – $206,423 (down $7,942)
Judicial or other legal professional – $206,408 (up $1,474)
Chief executive officer or managing director – $194,987 (down $2,733)
Financial investment advisor or manager – $191,986 (up $6,152)
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Revealed: The 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia with salaries close to $500K
Revealed: The 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia with salaries close to $500K

Time Out

time8 hours ago

  • Time Out

Revealed: The 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia with salaries close to $500K

They say money can't buy happiness, but it definitely buys you freedom to live a comfortable, stress-free life. If your finances are feeling tight or you're considering a career change, it's time to study up. The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) recently released a list of the highest-paying jobs in Australia – and the top gig is pulling in almost half a million a year on average. The ranking is based on data from millions of Aussie tax returns, collected by the ATO during the 2022–2023 financial year. While the figures are slightly dated, it's still fascinating to take a sticky beak at what some people are raking in. Plus, the top ten spots haven't changed in recent years – so it's safe to say the highest-earning jobs in Australia are much the same in 2025. It's no surprise that medical professionals dominated the top ten, with surgeons once again claiming the number one spot. During the 2022-23 financial year, Australia's 4,247 surgeons took home a whopping average of $472,475 a year – up $12,119 from the previous 12-month period. To put it in perspective, that's more than six times the national average taxable income of $74,240 across the same time frame. (The average full-time Aussie income soared past $100,000 in late 2024). The second-highest earners in Australia are anaesthetists, with the 3,658 surveyed earning an average of $447,193 annually. They saw the biggest year-on-year increase of $16,000 and are hot on the heels of our top-earning surgeons. Other medical professionals included in the top ten were internal medicine specialists in fourth place ($342,457), psychiatrists in fifth ($286,146) and other medical practitioners in sixth ($259,802). Financial dealers were the highest earners outside the medical field, ranking third overall with an average yearly income of $355,233. During the 12-month period, only 5,147 Aussies held this role – which, in simple terms, involves managing the finances of other wealthy individuals. The highest-paying job with the largest number of Aussies in the role was chief executive officers and managing directors, who earned an average of $194,987 per year. Interestingly, this was one of only three jobs that saw a drop in average income compared to the previous year's tax data, along with financial dealers (down $18,500) and mining engineers (down $7,942). You can see the full summary below. These are the 10 highest-paying jobs in Australia Surgeon – $472,475 (up $12,119) Anaesthetists – $447,193 (up $16,000) Financial dealer – $355,233 (down $18,500) Internal medicine specialist – $342,457 (up $1,728) Psychiatrist – $286,146 (up $9,601) Other medical practitioners – $259,802 (up $4,048) Mining engineer – $206,423 (down $7,942) Judicial or other legal professional – $206,408 (up $1,474) Chief executive officer or managing director – $194,987 (down $2,733) Financial investment advisor or manager – $191,986 (up $6,152)

Albanese's super tax faces major setback amid union alarm
Albanese's super tax faces major setback amid union alarm

Daily Mail​

time12 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Albanese's super tax faces major setback amid union alarm

Anthony Albanese's plan to tax Aussies with more than $3million in super has come under fire from the head of Australia's trade union movement. Labor wants to impose a new 15 per cent tax on the unrealised gains, or paper value, of retirement savings above this threshold before assets in a self-managed super fund are sold. This would double the headline rate to 30 per cent when the new tax for those with particularly big super balances was added to an existing 15 per cent tax on earnings during the accumulation phase of super. The government argues only 0.5 per cent of Australians, or 80,000 people have more than $3million in super and says a future government can index it for inflation. But Australian Council of Trade Unions secretary Sally McManus (pictured) said the policy needed to be indexed now to avoid trapping future workers as their super balances increased in coming decades. 'Over time, I do think it's got to be indexed because you've got to make sure eventually people don't end up there,' she told Nine's Today program on Tuesday. 'But that's a very long time in the future. You've got to have $3million in super in a self-managed fund to be affected by it.' Ms McManus has joined former Labor prime minister Paul Keating and a former ACTU chief Bill Kelty in criticising the Albanese Government's Better Targeted Superannuation Concessions bill. Ms McManus argued an 18-year-old tradie would need to be earning $300,000 a year to build up a $3million super balance by retirement, when asked about Keating and Kelty's comments on the super tax plan. 'It does need to be indexed though so I do support what they're saying about that,' she said. 'It will take a long time for your average tradie to be getting $3million when they retire.' But new analysis shows even average-income young workers now would be affected in four decades' time. Wilson Asset Management has done new modelling showing this failure to index the new tax would affect 5.4million Australians, aged 18 to 34, by the time they turned 67 and were able to qualify for the age pension. 'All age cohorts under the age of 35 would be captured by the taxation on unrealised gains by retirement,' it said. The modelling showed Labor's new tax on super balances above $3million, known as tax Division 296, would even affect young Aussies with a zero super balance now. 'Our modelling indicates those aged 27 and under with a zero starting superannuation balance would exceed the unindexed cap before retirement,' it said. 'This has led to some characterising it as a 'stealth tax', one that fundamentally alters the long-term investment incentives within superannuation.' A 19-year-old worker on a $54,088 salary, with zero super, would have $3.491million in retirement savings by 2071. Someone who is 20 now on a $66,768 salary and with just $75,000 in super would $5.197million in superannuation by 2072. Australians who studied longer before starting work would also be affected, with a 27-year-old worker with zero super, on a $90,315 salary now, likely to have $3.098million in super by 2065. A typical income earner, now 34, with $180,000 in superannuation would $3.5million in super by 2058. Keating, whose government introduced compulsory super in 1992, was also scathing of Labor' plan to tax the unrealised gains on super balances above $3million arguing 'every young person joining the workforce this year' would be affected. With Labor and union luminaries slamming the proposed super tax, Albanese declined to comment. 'I'm not commenting on various things that you tell me other people have said,' he told Sky News. Kelty, who served as ACTU secretary from 1983 to 2000, described the idea of taxing unrealised gains on super as 'bad policy'. 'I don't mind taxing people but not unrealised earnings,' he told The Australian last month.

Aussie woman shares her 'sneaky' hack for saving money on a popular McDonald's staple
Aussie woman shares her 'sneaky' hack for saving money on a popular McDonald's staple

Daily Mail​

time13 hours ago

  • Daily Mail​

Aussie woman shares her 'sneaky' hack for saving money on a popular McDonald's staple

An Aussie woman has revealed her 'sneakiest' McDonald's hack for snapping up a cheeseburger at a discounted price. Queensland podcast host Dani Said, 36, has shared a series of hacks for scoring cheaper deals at the popular fast food restaurant to TikTok. In her latest trick, Ms Said filmed herself in a McDonald's drive-thru asking the price of a cheeseburger which was $4.80. 'And, how much is a hamburger on its own?' the podcaster asked. '$2,' the cashier responded. Ms Said then ordered a hamburger and added a slice of cheese, which is what a cheeseburger is. Her total ended up being $3.15 - $2 for the hamburger and $1.15 for the cheese. Her video was flooded with comments from Aussies impressed with her 'hustle'. But many said the fast food chain was still too pricey. '$4.80 for a burger the size of a baby's fist?' one wrote. '$4.80 for 1 cheeseburger is wild! I remember when a small Big Mac meal was $4.95!' another said. '$1.15 for a slice of cheese? Tell 'em they're dreaming,' a third added. Others said they had tried the hack but to no avail. 'I've tried to do this and they told me they have to put a cheeseburger through, so stopped trying this hack,' one wrote. 'Sneaky, because you can't add cheese onto a hamburger on the MyMaccas app,' another advised. Current and former McDonald's staff said they had been warned about savvy Aussies trying to use the trick in the past. 'We were told we weren't allowed to do this, and we'd tell customers we would give them a slice of cheese separate from the burger, usually ended up being melted into the box,' one said. 'I would actually get in trouble from my manager for doing this for customers,' another said. But one worker said the hack would only work for a limited time. 'Hi, so I work at Maccas and the reason it's way cheaper is because the hamburger is on a temporary deal,' she wrote. 'So it seems weird but it won't be like this forever. 'The hamburger will go up soon.' The video received more than 680,000 views after Ms Said posted other 'Maccas hacks' to her TikTok account. In another video she clarified with a cashier that a small cheeseburger meal and a Happy Meal at the franchise were more or less 'exactly the same thing' plus a toy. She wrote the prices were $3 apart from $8.95 for a small cheeseburger meal to $5.95 for a Happy Meal. 'Do you get people asking that all the time?' she asked the cashier in the clip.

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