Before you apply for the worker retention payment, it’s important to understand if your service is eligible and the conditions you must meet.
On this page:
Who can apply
Early childhood education and care (ECEC) providers may apply for the worker retention payment if they:
- hold Child Care Subsidy (CCS) approval
- operate one of the following:
- Centre Based Day Care (CBDC) service
- Outside School Hours Care (OSHC) service
- Family Day Care (FDC) service that engages all its educators as employees
- In Home Care (IHC) service that engages all its educators as employees.
- meet all grant conditions outlined below.
FDC and IHC services that engage some or all educators as contractors are not eligible.
Preschools and kindergartens are not eligible.
We will provide information about how Family Day Care and In Home Care providers can apply soon. Eligible FDC and IHC providers will be able to get payments backdated to July 2026.
Which workers are covered
Providers must pass on funding to all ECEC workers who:
- work at an eligible service that opts in to the payment, and
- are covered by either the Children’s Services Award 2010 or the Educational Services (Teachers) Award 2020, or
- primarily undertake the duties covered in either of these awards but are covered by a different award or instrument, like a state industrial instrument.
This may include:
- early childhood teachers
- educators (including Family Day Care and In Home Care)
- cooks
- coordinators
- room leaders
- support workers
- trainees and apprentices.
These workers can be casual, part-time or full-time.
Head office staff and other administration staff are not eligible.
Workers employed through labour hire
Workers engaged through a labour hire agency are also covered, if they meet the criteria above.
If you use labour hire staff, you must ensure the worker retention payment is passed on to workers as higher wages. Funding cannot be used to pay for labour hire agency fees.
You should:
- work with the agency to determine how funding will be passed on
- update your contract with the agency to reflect these arrangements
- request evidence that funding has been passed on to workers.
We recommend you request evidence in one of the following formats.
A formal declaration with:
- the names of the workers who received funding
- the amount of funding provided to each worker (hourly pay rate + super)
- the period for which the funding was made, including any backpay
- details about any updates to contracts with workers about the arrangements, with details of the relevant clauses and the effective date.
Invoices or supplementary invoice reporting with:
- a line item for the worker retention payment, showing the total amount claimed for the invoice period
- a detailed breakdown for each eligible worker including the worker’s name, hours worked and corresponding funding amount
- a line item for any backpay being claimed, including the period for which the backpay applies.
You must be able to show in your reporting that all funding has been passed on to eligible workers. You do not need to seek evidence that the labour hire agency has a compliant workplace instrument in place.
Conditions
Providers must meet conditions to become, and stay, eligible for the worker retention payment.
You must engage workers through a workplace instrument
You must engage workers through a workplace instrument that meets grant conditions.
A workplace instrument is a document that sets out terms and conditions of employment. It’s a legally enforceable agreement between employers and employees.
This condition provides assurance that funding is being passed on to eligible workers through increased wages.
Types of workplace instruments
There are many different types of workplace instruments. Selecting the right one depends on your individual business needs.
Learn about the types of workplace instruments you may use.
What your workplace instrument must include
To be compliant, the workplace instrument must:
• include an obligation to pay workers at least 15% above the applicable award rates
• be in place until at least the end of the grant period.
‘Applicable award rates’ determines the minimum rates you must pay all eligible workers. These are set out at Schedule A of the grant guidelines and on our minimum rates page.
We understand that you may need time to update your workplace instruments to stay compliant under the program extension. We will provide more guidance soon.
A workplace instrument is not compliant if it excludes the above amounts from calculations of:
- penalties
- loadings
- termination payments
- payments while on leave
- superannuation.
We assess workplace instruments on a case-by-case basis.
Who your workplace instrument must cover
You must:
- give all eligible workers information about compliant workplace instruments
- provide them with the factsheet available on GrantConnect
- take all reasonable steps to engage all eligible workers under a compliant workplace instrument.
You must not pressure workers to agree to, or terminate, a workplace instrument.
If you are unable to engage all eligible workers under a compliant workplace instrument, we may deem you eligible if:
- at least 95% of eligible workers are covered
- you can show you took all reasonable steps to cover all workers.
Help preparing your workplace instrument
Search our directory to get help developing a compliant workplace instrument. We strongly encourage you to access this support before you apply. This will help us process your application quickly.
You must limit fee growth
You must limit fee growth by a set percentage. This is known as the fee growth cap.
This condition:
- supports affordable ECEC
- ensures the cost of a wage increase is not passed on to families.
What are the fee growth caps
The fee growth cap that applies to your service depends on your circumstances:
For services that applied before 1 December 2025, the fee growth caps are:
- 4.4% between 8 August 2024 and 7 August 2025
- 4.2% between 8 August 2025 and 7 August 2026
- 5.8% between 8 August 2026 and 7 August 2027.
For services that apply for funding from 1 December 2025 to 30 November 2026, the fee growth caps are:
- 8.6% between 8 August 2024 and 7 August 2026*
- no higher than 4.2% between 8 August 2025 and 7 August 2026
- 5.8% between 8 August 2026 and 7 August 2027.
*Services may instead meet this requirement by keeping fee increases within 4.4% from 8 August 2024 to 7 August 2025 and 4.2% from 8 August 2025 to 7 August 2026.
For all other CBDC and OSHC services applying for funding from 1 December 2026, the fee growth cap is:
- 5.8% between 17 June 2026 and 7 August 2027.
For FDC and IHC services, the fee growth cap is:
- 5.8% between 17 June 2026 and 7 August 2027.
Future fee growth caps will be based off the Childcare Services Cost Index.
The Childcare Services Cost Index is a new index developed by the Australian Bureau of Statistics. It measures changes in prices paid by providers for the goods, services and labour they buy to deliver child care.
My service announced a fee increase of more than 5.8%. Do I need to reduce it?
If your service did not have a grant agreement on 17 June 2026 and announced a fee increase of more than 5.8%, you may need to reduce the increase to remain eligible for funding.
We assess fee increases based on when families are first charged the higher fee, not when the increase was announced.
For example, if you notified families of a fee increase before 17 June 2026, but the higher fee was not charged until on or after 17 June 2026, the increase is treated as taking effect on or after 17 June 2026.
If the increase would exceed the fee growth cap that applies to your service, you must reduce the increase so it stays within the cap to remain eligible for funding.
This is particularly relevant for newly eligible services that became subject to a fee growth cap for the first time from 17 June 2026.
Costs included in the cap
All service costs included in your reported fees are subject to the fee growth cap.
Costs charged as extras, and not included in reported fees, are not subject to the fee growth cap.
Vacation care services may increase fees for excursions, where these reflect the actual cost. We may ask for evidence to demonstrate this.
How the cap applies
Established services
You can only increase hourly fees by up to the fee growth cap in the relevant period.
Example:
- Service A charged $14.50 per hour on 8 August 2025.
- The maximum hourly fee it can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is $15.11 (a 4.2% increase).
- Charging more than $15.11 per hour during this period will be a breach of its grant agreement.
New services
You can set your starting hourly fees. Once set, these become the baseline for the current fee growth cap period. This applies even if another service previously operated at the same site.
Example 1:
- Service B opens on 1 December 2025 and sets initial fees at $15.50 per hour.
- The maximum hourly fee it can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is $16.15 per hour (a 4.2% increase).
Example 2:
- Provider X starts operating a new OSHC service at a school on 2 January 2026. The school previously had a different OSHC service.
- As a new service, Provider X sets the new OSHC service’s hourly fee at $13.00 per hour.
- The maximum hourly fee it can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is $13.55 per hour (a 4.2% increase).
Transfer of service ownership
The new provider must apply the fee growth cap based on the service’s existing baseline.
Example:
- Provider Y acquired Service C from another provider on 1 December 2025.
- If Service D charged $13.50 per hour on 8 August 2025 under the previous provider, the maximum hourly fee Provider Y can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is $14.07 per hour (a 4.2% increase).
Transfer of provider ownership
The new provider must apply the fee growth cap to each service based on its existing baseline.
Example:
- A new owner acquired Provider Z and all its services. On 8 August 2025:
- Service D charged $13.30 per hour
- Service E charged $13.60 per hour
- Service F charged $13.90 per hour.
- The maximum hourly fee Provider Z can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is:
- $13.86 per hour for Service D (a 4.2% increase)
- $14.17 per hour for Service E (a 4.2% increase)
- $14.48 per hour for Service F (a 4.2% increase).
Relocated service
A relocated service is treated as a new service – the above rules relating to “new services” apply.
Example:
- Service H charged $15.50 per hour on 8 August 2025. It relocates on 1 February 2026 and resets fees at $16.50 per hour.
- The maximum hourly fee it can charge up to and including 7 August 2026 is $17.19 per hour (a 4.2% increase from the reset fee).
How we monitor the cap
We will monitor your fee growth for the duration of your grant agreement.
If we think you are breaching this condition, we:
- will contact you
- may stop or withhold your payments, require you to repay funds or take other action.
If you need a different cap
You can request an alternative fee growth cap for one or more services in limited circumstances where financial viability is impacted.
Financial viability is the ability to maintain the existing standard of service offering based on current level of revenue.
You can request an alternative fee growth cap in the grants portal. You can do this:
- when you first apply for the worker retention payment – via your initial grant application
- while awaiting approval or at any time during your grant agreement – via a variation request form.
You must:
- show financial viability issues at both the provider and service level
- propose an alternative fee growth cap for each service.
You must provide:
- a financial statement for the most recent financial reporting period
- financial information for each service
- current proposed service fees.
In the rare case a financial statement is not available, we may accept alternative evidence that shows operating profit and loss occurred over a reporting period. This evidence must be supported by a signed statutory declaration confirming the accuracy of the information.
All evidence must be signed and dated by:
- an internal public accountant, or
- a senior authorising officer such as a Director, Chief Executive Officer or financial manager.
We may ask you for more information where necessary.
How we assess applications
We assess requests based on your financial position and operating circumstances. We assess:
- large providers against our financial viability framework for large providers
- small and medium providers based on earning margin or profitability over the most recent financial reporting period.
If more than 3 months have passed since the most recent reporting period and your circumstances have changed, we will assess your application based on earning margin or profitability, combining results from:
- the most recent full reporting year
- year-to-date financials in the current reporting year.
We will consider:
- revenue
- costs
- net operating profit or loss
- specific costs in net operating profit/loss such as depreciation, amortisation and finance cost.
When assessing costs for financial viability, we:
- will consider the financial data in your application and any unique circumstances such as repair costs due to extreme weather events
- will not consider costs that are not necessary to sustain current operations such as capital for expanding or opening a new service.
If approved, we will set an alternative cap for each service. This may be at your proposed cap or another percentage that we determine.
If not approved, you may continue under the standard cap or withdraw the service from the program.
You can reapply if your circumstances change.
You must pass funding on to workers
You can only use the worker retention payment to:
- pay eligible workers a wage increase
- cover eligible on-costs.
You may only use funds for on-costs after you have paid all eligible workers at least the minimum rates.
You cannot use funding for any other purpose. This includes:
- reducing your current wages and replacing them with the worker retention payment (unless you’re required to pay an uplift to the Children’s Services Award 2010 as required by the Fair Work Commission’s gender-based undervaluation proceedings)
- costs incurred preparing your application
- administrative or support costs for the wage increase such as accounting, legal fees or financial advice
- costs related to joining or developing a workplace instrument.
What do I need to pay staff
We outline the minimum rates that you must pass on to help you meet this condition.
What are on-costs
On-costs are the additional costs of employing workers on top of paying wages. The eligible on-costs are:
- superannuation contributions
- employee entitlements
- leave loadings
- workers’ compensation insurance
- payroll tax.
Your payment includes at least an additional 20% funding (calculated against your base funding) for on-costs.
You must meet safety standards from July 2027
From July 2027, services that do not meet Quality Area 2 of the National Quality Standard may have their funding cut or suspended.
We will continue to work with services that are not regulated under the NQF (such as In Home Care services) to ensure consistency with quality standard requirements.
We will provide more information on this requirement soon.
More information and help
Grant guidelines
Read the grant guidelines for more information.
Get help
Help is available to understand and meet these requirements.