The Guides to Social Policy Law is a collection of publications designed to assist decision makers administering social policy law. The information contained in this publication is intended only as a guide to relevant legislation/policy. The information is accurate as at the date listed at the bottom of the page, but may be subject to change. To discuss individual circumstances please contact Services Australia.

1.1.A.70 Applicable percentage (CCS)

Definition

An individual's (1.1.I.90) applicable percentage (rate of subsidy) for a session of care (1.1.S.40) provided to a child in a CCS fortnight (1.1.C.10), which is used to determine an individual's entitlement (1.1.E.30), is calculated based on the combined annual ATI (1.1.A.20) of the individual and their partner (1.1.P.30) (if they have one).

First child

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or below $80,000 the applicable percentage will be 90%.

If an individual's combined annual ATI is above $80,000 and below $530,000 the applicable percentage will gradually reduce from 90% to 0%, tapering down by 1% for each $5,000 of family income. To calculate an individual's applicable percentage in this income threshold (1.1.I.70), the following formula is used and the result rounded to 2 decimal places:

  • 90 - [(combined annual income - lower income threshold ($80,000)) ÷ 5,000]

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or above $530,000 the applicable percentage will be zero per cent. That is, while the individual may be eligible for CCS, they will not have any entitlement to CCS.

Higher CCS for multiple children

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or below $138,118 the applicable percentage will be 95%.

If an individual's combined annual ATI is above $138,118 and below $183,118 the applicable percentage will gradually reduce from 95% to 80%, tapering down by 1% for each $3,000 of family income. To calculate an individual's applicable percentage in this income threshold, the following formula is used and the result rounded to 2 decimal places:

  • 95 - [(combined annual income - lower income threshold ($138,118)) ÷ 3,000]

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or above $183,118 and below $262,408 the applicable percentage will be 80%.

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or above $262,408 and below $352,408, the applicable percentage will gradually reduce from 80% to 50%, tapering down by 1% for each $3,000 of family income. To calculate an individual's applicable percentage in this income threshold, the following formula is used and the result rounded to 2 decimal places:

  • 80 - [(combined annual income - third income threshold ($262,408)) ÷ 3,000]

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or above $352,408 and below $362,408 the applicable percentage will be 50%.

If an individual's combined annual ATI is equal to or above $362,408 the applicable percentage will be zero per cent. That is, while the individual may be eligible for CCS, they will not have any entitlement to CCS.

Note: The lower income threshold will be indexed (1.1.I.80) by CPI at the commencement of each financial year and the other thresholds will be increased accordingly.

Act reference: FAAct Schedule 2 Amounts of CCS and ACCS

Policy reference: FA Guide 1.1.I.70 Income thresholds (CCS), 3.5 CCS entitlement, 3.5.1 CCS - combined annual ATI

Last reviewed: