April 2026: Business Dates Australia | BAS, Payroll & Key Deadlines

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By HelloLedger

Posted On April 4, 2026

April is where the numbers start to tell the truth. The early uncertainty has settled, trading patterns are more consistent, and most businesses can now see how the year is really tracking — not just how it felt at the start.

With nine months of financial results behind you, there’s enough clarity to move beyond assumptions and start making informed decisions that shape the outcome before EOFY.

April also follows the close of the Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) year and brings with it key reporting obligations, including BAS, payroll tax, and ongoing compliance deadlines. It’s a month where reporting requirements and planning opportunities begin to overlap.

What you focus on in April often determines whether the lead-up to June feels controlled or compressed.

This guide covers the key April 2026 business dates in Australia, along with what business owners should be focusing on now to stay organised, maintain visibility, and take action early where it matters most.

Why April Matters for Your Business

April isn’t just another month in the calendar it’s where the financial year becomes clearer.

By now, the early momentum of the year has settled and most businesses have a more reliable view of how things are tracking. Revenue patterns are more consistent, expenses are easier to predict, and the numbers are starting to reflect what’s actually happening in the business.

Understanding the April business dates in Australia helps you stay organised, but it also highlights something more important: this is the point where you can start making informed decisions while there is still time to influence the outcome.

That’s exactly why April matters:

1. You have nine months of real financial data

By the end of March, most businesses have nine months of actual trading results.

That provides a much clearer picture of profitability, margins and tax exposure than earlier in the year. With this information, you can move beyond estimates and start reviewing your likely year-end position with confidence..

2. The FBT year has just ended

The Fringe Benefits Tax (FBT) year closed on 31 March, making April the time to finalise and review what has been recorded.

Motor vehicles, entertainment expenses and other employee benefits may all create FBT obligations if they haven’t been tracked correctly during the year.

Reviewing these items now helps ensure everything is captured correctly before lodgement and provides an opportunity to adjust your approach for the next FBT year.

3. The final quarter of the financial year has begun

April marks the start of the last quarter before EOFY.

At this point, the direction of the year is largely visible but not fixed. This is where business owners can assess whether they are on track and make adjustments where needed, whether that’s managing cash flow, reviewing expenses, or planning upcoming commitments.

4. Compliance and planning come together

Regular obligations such as BAS, IAS and payroll tax reporting continue through April, but this is also when many businesses begin actively reviewing their financial position.

When your records are up to date, it becomes much easier to understand where things stand and make decisions with clarity, rather than reacting under pressure later.

5. Decisions made now still shape the EOFY outcome

Waiting until June to review the numbers often limits the options available.

April, however, provides a window where decisions can still influence the result — whether that’s timing income and expenses, planning super contributions, or reviewing business structure and obligations.

Taking action now can make the lead-up to EOFY feel far more controlled and less reactive.

Important April Business Dates Australia – 2026

Below are the key dates you need to mark in your calendar:

1 April – Odometer Readings for 2026 FBT Year

If you use the operating cost method for motor vehicles, odometer readings are required as at 1 April to start tracking for the new FBT year.

This is also a good time to:

  • Ensure records are being maintained correctly from the start of the new FBT year
  • Reset logbooks if needed
  • Review vehicle usage

7 April – March Payroll Tax

Businesses registered for payroll tax must lodge and pay their March payroll tax (state-based).

With wages continuing to grow for many businesses, this is an important obligation to stay on top of to avoid penalties.

21 April – BAS / IAS for March

For businesses reporting monthly, BAS or IAS lodgement and payment for March is due.

This includes:

  • PAYG instalments (if applicable)
  • GST
  • PAYG withholding

28 April – March Quarter Super Contributions Due

Super guarantee contributions for the January–March quarter must be received by employees’ super funds by this date.

Late payments may result in:

  • Super Guarantee Charge (SGC) obligations
  • Loss of tax deductibility

28 April – Time to Get Ready for Payday Super

With upcoming changes requiring super to be paid at the same time as wages, now is the time to start preparing your systems and processes.

This isn’t just a compliance change — it may impact how cash flows through your business and how payroll is managed day-to-day.

To get ready, review:

  • Whether your payroll software can support more frequent super payments
  • How this change will affect your cash flow timing
  • Whether any internal processes or approvals need to be updated

Starting this review early gives you time to adjust your systems, test your process, and avoid disruption when the changes take effect.

28 April – Once your March BAS is lodged, it’s time to start tax planning

For many businesses, lodging the March BAS is the point where the year becomes clear enough to plan with confidence. You now have:

  • Nine months of actual financial data
  • A clearer view of profitability
  • Better visibility over your likely tax position

This is where tax planning should begin, not in June. Starting now gives you time to:

  • Adjust before options become limited
  • Explore available strategies
  • Make informed decisions

What You Should Be Doing in April (Besides Meeting Deadlines)

April isn’t about doing more, it’s about getting clear and making the right decisions early.

As summer fades and business settles into a steadier rhythm, this is the point where you move from momentum to control.

These are the actions that help business owners stay ahead before the lead-up to EOFY begins.


Finalise FBT and Reset for the New Year

With the FBT year ending on 31 March, April is the time to close things out properly and start fresh.

  • Review motor vehicle usage and logbooks
  • Check entertainment and employee benefits
  • Confirm any exemptions or adjustments
  • Identify anything that needs correcting before lodgement

Then reset your processes so the new FBT year starts clean from day one


Review Your Q3 Results (Jan–March)

This is your first real checkpoint for the year.

  • Compare year-to-date performance to last year
  • Review margins, not just revenue
  • Identify any cost creep or pressure points
  • Look at trends across the last three months

By April, the numbers should be telling a consistent story


Understand Your Tax Position Now

Once your March BAS is prepared, you can start getting specific.

  • Estimate your current year tax position
  • Review PAYG instalments (are they accurate?)
  • Check how GST is impacting cash flow
  • Assess whether you’re setting aside enough for upcoming liabilities

This is where uncertainty turns into clarity

Start Real Tax Planning (Not June Planning)

April is where tax planning actually works.

  • Model super contributions and timing
  • Review trust distribution strategy early
  • Assess Division 7A exposure
  • Plan asset purchases before EOFY pressure
  • Identify opportunities while they’re still available

Waiting until June often means working with what’s already locked in

Review Pipeline and Capacity

As the year settles, the next few months become clearer.

  • What does your workload look like leading into June?
  • Are there gaps in your pipeline?
  • Or are you heading into a compressed, high-pressure period?
  • Do pricing or resourcing need adjusting?

April is where you can smooth out the run into EOFY

April Risk, Cash Flow & Readiness Check

April is one of the clearest points in the year to step back and assess where things actually stand.

With nine months of data behind you and key obligations now flowing through, this is where risks, pressure points and gaps in planning tend to become visible.

This isn’t about over-analysing — it’s about identifying what needs attention before the final quarter accelerates.

Cash Flow Position

  • Do you have enough cash set aside for upcoming BAS, super and tax obligations?
  • Is GST being separated, or absorbed into general cash flow?
  • Are debtor days starting to stretch or payments slowing down?

Cash flow pressure usually shows up here first

Tax Exposure

  • Do you have a clear estimate of your current year tax position?
  • Are PAYG instalments aligned with your actual results?
  • Are you setting aside enough or likely to be caught short later?

Uncertainty now often turns into surprises in June

Compliance Risk

  • Are BAS, payroll and super obligations up to date?
  • Are records complete and accurate?
  • Are there any gaps that would make reporting harder later?

Small issues now can become bigger problems under time pressure

Pipeline & Revenue Visibility

  • Do you have confirmed work locked in for the next 2–3 months?
  • Are there any gaps in your pipeline that need attention now?
  • Is revenue relying on a small number of clients or projects?

April is where forward visibility becomes clearer

Capacity & Operational Pressure

  • Is your team operating efficiently, or already stretched?
  • Are you heading into a compressed period leading into EOFY?
  • Do workloads, pricing or resourcing need to be adjusted?

Pressure rarely appears suddenly… it builds over time

Readiness Check: How to Make the Most of April

April is often the point where the year becomes clearer for business owners. By now, the early momentum has settled and most businesses have a more reliable view of how things are actually tracking.

With nine months of results behind you, this is a natural point to pause — not to slow down, but to make sure everything is aligned before the final months of the financial year.

Before the lead-up to EOFY begins, it’s worth checking in on the foundations. Ask yourself:

• Do I have clear visibility over cash flow for the next 30–60 days?
• Are March transactions finalised and ready for BAS or reporting?
• Are outstanding invoices being actively followed up?
• Do I understand my current tax position?
• Are funds being set aside for upcoming tax and super obligations?
• Are my systems and processes supporting me or creating friction?

If any of these feel unclear, April is a good time to pause and reset.

Taking a short review now can help avoid unnecessary pressure later in the financial year and ensure the lead-up to EOFY feels controlled, rather than reactive.

Why HelloLedger Emphasises April Deadlines

April is where the financial year becomes clear enough to act on.

By this stage of the year, most businesses have nine months of consistent trading behind them. Income patterns, staffing costs and operating expenses have stabilised, and the financial results are now showing a clearer picture of how the year is actually tracking.

That’s why April deadlines matter more than many business owners realise.

Here’s why:

🚩 April gives you a clear position — not just an estimate

With nine months of real financial data behind you, April is one of the most accurate points in the year to understand your position. You’re no longer working off projections, you can see:

  • how the business is performing
  • where margins are sitting
  • and what your likely tax outcome may be

This is where informed decisions become possible

By April, the numbers are consistent enough to confirm what’s actually happening in the business.

• margins tightening or improving
• expenses increasing or stabilising
• cash flow pressure building or easing
• revenue tracking above or below expectations

These aren’t early indicators anymore — they’re trends.

Seeing this clearly now allows you to respond early, rather than adjust under pressure later.

🚩 It creates a window to act — before options narrow

April sits in a unique position. You have:

  • enough data to plan properly
  • and still enough time to act

Whether it’s adjusting spending, planning investments, managing cash flow or reviewing your tax position, decisions made now can still influence the final outcome.

April deadlines, particularly BAS, super and payroll obligations, reflect activity that has already occurred. But they also provide the information needed to plan ahead. When reporting is up to date, it becomes much easier to:

  • understand your current position
  • identify opportunities and
  • make decisions with confidence

April 2026 Business Checklist for Australian Businesses

Use this as your April checkpoint — a simple way to ensure your business is organised, compliant, and positioned to make the most of the final months before EOFY.

  • Identify one financial priority to improve before EOFY
  • Lodge March BAS or IAS (if reporting monthly)
  • Review March payroll and payroll tax obligations
  • Finalise FBT review and ensure records are complete
  • Reconcile March bank and credit card accounts
  • Review outstanding invoices and follow-up processes
  • Assess cash flow for the next 60–90 days
  • Review year-to-date profit after nine months of trading
  • Estimate your current tax position
  • Ensure March quarter super contributions are ready for payment
  • Review payroll processes in preparation for Payday Super changes

Need Support Staying on Track in April?

By April, most business owners have a sense of how the year is going but not always a clear understanding of what to do with that information.

The numbers are there.
The trends are visible.

The challenge is turning that into decisions early enough to make a difference. That’s where we come in. At HelloLedger, we work with business owners to:

• stay on top of BAS, payroll and super obligations
• keep cash flow visible and manageable
• understand where they stand from a tax perspective
• identify opportunities before EOFY pressure builds
• move forward with more structure and less guesswork

Sometimes it’s not about doing more, it’s about having clarity around what matters most right now.

If things feel unclear, that’s usually the starting point.

Tax doesn’t improve by waiting.
It improves when you understand your position and act on it.

If you’d like a clearer view of where things stand, book a discovery call and we can walk through it with you.

“HelloLedger is an amazing financial service, my business has grown so much in the last two years, every aspect that can become tedious is so easily
taken care of, I would recommend their services to anyone looking for a totally fresh, and customisable
approach to business and financial assistance”

-Josh Phillips


Ready to stop guessing and start growing?


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