Available for the following Payroll plans: Standard, Premium, Core Payroll, Unlimited+Payroll
Available for the following user access levels: Admin
From 1 July 2026, new Payday Super rules require that an employee's super fund membership is confirmed before you send their first super contribution to that fund. Payroll does this for you automatically through a process called Member Verification Request (MVR).
This article explains what super fund verification is, when it happens, the statuses you'll see, and what to do if an employee needs your attention.
Helpful Hint
You don't need to turn anything on. Verification runs automatically in the background whenever an employee's super fund details are saved. This guide is here so you understand what you're seeing and how it affects your super payments.
Understanding super fund verification
Before you pay super to a fund for an employee for the first time, the ATO's Payday Super reforms require you to confirm that the employee's membership details are correct with that fund. This stops contributions being rejected because of a wrong name, date of birth, or member number — which today leads to refunds, re-submissions, and delays after the money has already moved.
Payroll handles this automatically. When an employee's super fund is saved, Payroll sends a Member Verification Request (MVR) to the fund. The fund checks the details against its own records and sends back a result — usually within minutes, and always within 24 hours.
You'll see the result as a status against the employee's super fund record. You don't need to contact the fund or fill in any forms — Payroll does it on your behalf.
A verification is sent automatically whenever an employee's super fund is set up or changed. In each case, it's the first time super will be paid to that particular fund for that employee.
| What happened | What Payroll does |
|---|---|
| A new employee nominates a super fund during onboarding | When a super fund is saved for the first time, Payroll verifies it before the first contribution. |
| An employee changes their fund via self-service | If an employee switches super funds themselves, the new fund is verified before you pay into it. |
| An admin updates an employee's super fund | If you (or an HR admin) change an employee's fund, the new fund is verified. |
| An employee nominates a Self-Managed Super Fund (SMSF) | SMSFs are verified too — see Self-Managed Super Funds below. |
Good to know
Verification happens when super fund details are saved, not when you run a pay. That's why it's worth recording an employee's super details as early as possible — see Tips for a smooth roll-over.
If an employee's super fund was already confirmed in your HR platform — during onboarding or through the super choice portal — Payroll trusts that result and does not re-check it. This avoids duplicate work and keeps things moving.
Payroll only runs its own verification when a fund is set up or changed directly in the payroll system. So you'll typically only see verification activity in payroll for employees whose super fund was added or changed in Payroll itself.
Not every change needs verification. The following do not start a new check:
| Scenario | Why not |
|---|---|
| The employee chooses your default super fund | A Member Registration Request (MRR) is sent instead. This creates the employee's membership with your default fund — there's nothing to verify yet. |
| The fund was already verified in HR or the super choice portal | Payroll reuses that result rather than checking again. |
| Only the fund's details change (e.g. the fund updates its name or address) | The employee's membership hasn't changed, so no re-check is needed. |
| A regular, ongoing pay run to an already-verified fund | Verification is a first-time check. Once an employee is verified for a fund, normal super keeps flowing without re-checking each pay. |
Statuses and super payments
Each employee's super fund record shows one of these statuses:
| Status | What it means | Can you pay super? |
|---|---|---|
| Pending | The request has been sent to the fund and you're waiting for a response (up to 24 hours). | Not yet — held until verified |
| Verified | The fund confirmed the employee's details are correct. | Yes |
| Action Required | The fund couldn't confirm the employee's details. | No — needs attention first |
| Incomplete | The fund didn't respond to the verification request within 24 hours. | Not yet — needs follow-up |
| Not Applicable | The fund doesn't support electronic verification, so no check is needed. | Yes |
Note
For privacy reasons, the status won't tell you exactly which detail didn't match. Your employee will be told what to update — see What your employees will see.
The check is applied at one clear point: when you create a super payment from a pay run, before it's sent to the funds. Payroll looks at each employee's current status at that moment:
- Employees who are Verified or Not Applicable are included as normal.
- Employees who are Pending, Action Required, Incomplete, or have no verification on file are held back from that super payment.
Verification is only ever requested once — when the super fund is first saved. Creating a super payment does not start a new verification; it simply checks the employee's current status. If an employee isn't Verified (or Not Applicable) at that point, they're blocked from that super payment and can't be added to it. They stay blocked until their verification is resolved — there's no automatic re-verification at each pay run.
Important
Super that's missed while an employee is Pending or Action Required is not back-dated automatically. Once the employee is verified, their super is included in the next super payment you create. To avoid delays, resolve Action Required employees promptly.
An employee stays held back from super payments until the issue is fixed. To clear it, one of the following needs to happen:
- The employee (or you) updates their super fund details to match the fund's records. This sends a fresh verification automatically.
- The employee nominates a different fund, which is then verified.
Once the new verification comes back Verified, the employee is included in the next super payment you create.
SMSFs are verified too, but they work slightly differently from regular (APRA-regulated) funds:
- An SMSF is contacted through its Electronic Service Address (ESA) — the same address used to send it super contributions — rather than through the standard fund registry.
- The SMSF record must have both an ABN and an ESA recorded. If the ESA is missing, the field will be highlighted in red and an ESA will need to be specified. As soon as the ESA is saved, verification is sent automatically.
- The response window is the same: up to 24 hours.
For your employees
Employees are kept informed automatically, by email and in-app notification (and mobile push where available):
- When verification starts — they're told their super fund membership is being verified, with the fund name and date. No sensitive details are included.
- If verification can't be completed — they're told what to do, without naming the exact field that didn't match:
| What they're told | What they should do |
|---|---|
| Their details don't match the fund's records | Update their super fund details to match the fund, or choose a different fund. |
| The fund can't accept contributions for them (e.g. account closed or not open to new members) | Contact the fund directly, or choose a different super fund. |
- Record super fund details early. Verification starts when details are saved, so capture a new employee's super fund well before their first pay run. This gives the fund time to respond before you create a super payment.
- Encourage accurate details. Verification depends on the name, date of birth, TFN, and member number matching the fund's records exactly. Accurate onboarding data means fewer Action Required cases.
- For SMSF employees, confirm the ESA is recorded. No ESA means no verification — and no super payment — until it's added.
Frequently asked questions
No. Verification runs automatically once it's enabled for your account. You'll simply start seeing verification statuses against employee super funds.
When you create a super payment from a pay run, before it's submitted to the funds. Each employee's status is checked at that point.
They're blocked from that super payment. Creating a super payment checks their status but doesn't send a new verification — the original request stays open until the fund responds. Once it comes back Verified, they'll be included in a super payment you create after that point. Missed super isn't back-dated, so resolve any hold-ups promptly.
The status moves to Incomplete and the verification is retried in the background. The employee can't be included in a super payment until it resolves.
No. If the fund was already confirmed in HR or via the super choice portal, Payroll reuses that result. Payroll only runs its own check when a fund is set up or changed directly in payroll.
For member privacy, the reason isn't shown to employers. Your employee receives guidance on what to update.
No. When an employee joins your registered default fund, Payroll sends a Member Registration Request (MRR) to set up their membership instead of a verification.
The status will show Not Applicable and you can pay super as normal — no action needed.
Glossary
| Term | Meaning |
|---|---|
| MVR (Member Verification Request) | The request Payroll sends to a super fund to confirm an employee's membership details before the first contribution. |
| MRR (Member Registration Request) | Sent when an employee joins your default fund — it creates their membership rather than verifying an existing one. |
| SMSF (Self-Managed Super Fund) | A super fund the member manages themselves. Verified via its Electronic Service Address (ESA). |
| ESA (Electronic Service Address) | The address used to send SuperStream messages (including verification) to an SMSF. Required for SMSF records. |
| Payday Super | The ATO reform, effective 1 July 2026, requiring super to be paid alongside salary, with membership verification before first contribution. |