💵 Salary Guide

Is $140,000 a good salary in Australia?

Direct answer

$140,000 is well above the average full-time salary in Australia and would usually be considered a strong to high income.

It places you well above the median ($78,000) and comfortably above the average ($97,500), which usually means more flexibility even after tax.

Salary band
Well above average
Lifestyle feel
Very strong
Typical position
Upper range

Your take-home on $140,000 works out to $101,316/year — that's $8,443/month or $1,948/week to actually work with. Whether that feels comfortable depends most on your rent or mortgage situation and which city you're in — the same salary can stretch very differently between Adelaide and inner Sydney. Below we break down how this income compares to Australian salary benchmarks, what the lifestyle trade-offs look like in practice, and which roles typically sit at this level.

Salary After Tax
ATO 2025–26 · LITO included
$
Annual take-home pay
$101,316
$8,443/mo · $3,897/fn · $1,948/wk
Take-home Tax
Gross income$140,000
Income tax−$35,884
LITO offset+$0
Medicare levy (2%)−$2,800
Total tax−$38,684
Take-home pay$101,316
Effective rate
27.6%
Marginal rate
37.0%

Includes LITO. Does not include HELP repayments or other offsets.

Take-home pay on $140,000

Annual
$101,316
Monthly
$8,443
Fortnightly
$3,897
Weekly
$1,948

2025–26 tax year. Effective rate 27.6% · Marginal rate 37%. See the full salary breakdown or use the salary after tax calculator if you want to test other income levels.

How $140k compares to other salaries

Here's what this actually means for you: $140,000 is $42,500 above $97,500 and $62,000 above $78,000. That places it in the upper range of the full-time salary range in Australia, rather than at the very bottom or the very top of the market. For broader context, compare it with our average salary guide and the broader good salary guide.

Average salary
$97,500
$42,500 above $97,500
Median salary
$78,000
$62,000 above $78,000
Position
Upper range
Well above average band

What life looks like on $140k in Australia

This is where the salary starts to feel real. The headline number matters less than what is left after tax, housing, and everyday costs. A single person can often make this income go further than a one-income household with children, which is why the same salary can feel comfortable for one family and tight for another. If you want to test your own numbers, use the living expenses calculator.

Rent or mortgage pressure

Housing costs still matter, but they are less likely to squeeze the rest of your finances unless you deliberately upscale.

Discretionary spending

You usually have strong room for discretionary spending, lifestyle upgrades, and family costs.

Savings ability

Savings, investing, and faster debt reduction are usually much easier at this band.

How far does $140k go by city?

Your weekly take-home is $1,948. After paying median rent, here is what is left for everything else — food, transport, utilities, savings, and discretionary spending. Figures use mid-2025 median rents across all dwelling types (Domain/CoreLogic). A 1-bedroom unit in most cities rents for considerably less; a house in an inner suburb can be substantially more.

Sydney
Median rent$776/wk
Rent share40% of take-home
$1,172/wk remaining
Perth
Median rent$693/wk
Rent share36% of take-home
$1,255/wk remaining
Brisbane
Median rent$657/wk
Rent share34% of take-home
$1,291/wk remaining
Adelaide
Median rent$610/wk
Rent share31% of take-home
$1,338/wk remaining
Melbourne
Median rent$580/wk
Rent share30% of take-home
$1,368/wk remaining

"Remaining" covers all non-rent expenses: food, transport, utilities, insurance, childcare, and savings. Use the living expenses calculator to model your actual costs.

Conclusion

$140,000 is well above average in Australia. At this level, salary is less about whether basic costs are covered and more about how much room you want for housing choice, private schooling, investing, or accelerated financial goals. If you want the hard numbers, check the matching after-tax page or run the salary after tax calculator.

  • Well above average nationally
  • Strong buffer after housing
  • More capacity to save or invest

What jobs pay $140k in Australia?

Roles that commonly pay around $140,000 include the examples below. Ranges reflect typical full-time salaries under relevant awards or enterprise agreements — exact figures shift by state, sector, and seniority. For a broader view, see our salary by industry comparison.

Senior legal roles
$130k–$200k+
Principal engineers
$130k–$180k
Senior finance roles
$130k–$200k+
Technology architects
$130k–$180k
Childcare affordability

How far does $140,000 go with childcare?

$140,000 is usually a strong family-income benchmark, though childcare still affects how much room you keep for broader baby and household costs.

A good next step is returning to work 5 days on $120,000, which gives you a matched salary-and-childcare scenario. If you are planning the broader family decision, visit the having a baby hub.

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How this page works

This page combines broad salary benchmarks, tax context, and living-cost framing to answer whether a given salary is likely to feel strong, average, or tight in Australia.

Read more

Methodology

  1. Start with the nominated salary.
  2. Compare it with broad benchmark salary references.
  3. Use take-home pay and housing-cost context to make the comparison more practical.
  4. Present the result as a benchmark view rather than a universal answer.

Assumptions

  • A 'good' salary depends on city, housing costs, and household structure.
  • Benchmarks are directional rather than personalised.
  • Living-cost examples are illustrative and not a household budget model.

Limitations

  • Two people on the same salary can have very different outcomes.
  • Job-specific market rates can sit above or below the broad benchmark used here.
Read more about our methodology →

Life Calculators provides independent modelling tools based on publicly available data and standard formulas. Results are estimates only and are not financial advice.

Last updated: 5 April 2026