Think your six-figure pay packet automatically catapults you into Australia’s elite? Think again. In a country where a smashed-avo brunch can run you twenty bucks and Sydney’s median house price still hovers near the million-dollar mark, the line between “doing alright” and “truly upper class” is blurrier than ever.
So where does that line fall in 2025?
Grab your (oat-milk) flat white and let’s stack your income—and your household’s—against the freshest ATO and ABS numbers. You might be shocked to learn which salaries scrape into the top 10 %, and which families are statistically “rich” even if they don’t feel it.
Personal vs household income. A surgeon on $300 k may look rich, but a couple with two modest salaries can show up as “upper class” once their pay packets are added together.
Before-tax vs after-tax. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) publishes figures both ways. What you can actually spend is after-tax (or “disposable”) income, but most salary talk is pre-tax.
Location, location. A six-figure salary stretches further in regional Queensland than in inner-Sydney.
Income isn’t the whole story. Net wealth (home equity, super, shares) separates the merely “high-earners” from families who enjoy multi-million-dollar safety nets.
Keeping those caveats in mind, researchers usually tag the top 20 per cent of households or the top 10 per cent of individuals as “upper class”. Here’s what the latest data show.
| percentile | 2022-23 taxable income* | What it means |
|---|---|---|
| 50th (median) | ≈ $65 000 | You earn more than half the work-force, less than half |
| 75th | ≈ $96 000 | Solidly “middle-to-upper middle” |
| 90th | ≈ $137 000 | Crosses into the “upper class” band |
| 99th | ≈ $253 000 | You’re in the fabled top 1 % |
*Figures come from ATO 2021-22 tax statistics, adjusted for wage growth to mid-2024. Morningstar summarised the percentile break-points in January 2025. – Morningstar
Bottom line: If your own salary is roughly $140 000 or higher, you’re already earning as much as (or more than) 9 in 10 Australian adults.
The ABS “Distribution of Household Income” release lets us compare entire households. In 2021-22 (the newest full data set):
| income group (after-tax, per household) | average annual income |
|---|---|
| lowest 20 % | $ 54 k |
| middle 20 % | $ 117 k |
| fourth 20 % | $ 154 k |
| highest 20 % (top quintile) | $ 288 k |
Australian Bureau of Statistics
Because $288 k is an average for the richest fifth, the entry-level threshold to break into that club is lower. ABS micro-data put the 80th-percentile “entry ticket” at roughly $190 k–$200 k after tax, or about $250 k before tax for a household with two adults.
So a household bringing in $200 k+ (after tax) or $250 k+ (gross) is safely in “upper-class” territory.
Income is a snapshot; wealth shows the long game.
| metric | all households | highest 20 % |
|---|---|---|
| average net worth | $1.46 million | $3.2 million |
Australian Bureau of StatisticsPoverty and Inequality
If your family balance-sheet is nudging $3 million, you match the average wealth of Australia’s upper-income quintile—even if your annual earnings momentarily dip.
ACT tops the median personal-income table at $72 115, while Tasmania sits lowest at $50 645. – Australian Bureau of Statistics
Sydney’s Double Bay taxpayers reported an eye-watering $354 308 average taxable income in 2021-22—the highest suburb figure on record. Several Melbourne and Perth postcodes follow close behind.
Living in a high-salary postcode doesn’t automatically vault you into the national upper class, but it does reset the “what feels normal” benchmark in day-to-day life.
A couple grossing $260 k in regional South Australia may feel far wealthier than a similar couple renting in inner-city Sydney. Mortgage size, childcare fees, private-school choices and commuting costs can swallow disposable income quickly. Economists therefore warn against relying on a single Australia-wide cut-off to judge class.
| Situation | “Upper-class” ball-park today |
|---|---|
| Single earner | $140 k+ salary (before tax) |
| Couple, one income | $190 k+ salary (before tax) |
| Dual-income household | combined $250 k+ (before tax) or $200 k+ after tax |
| Net worth | $3 million+ in assets, whatever the income flow |
Hit any one of those markers and, statistically speaking, you’re rubbing shoulders with Australia’s upper slice.
Australia doesn’t hand out “upper-class certificates”, but the fresh data are surprisingly clear:
Top-10 % individuals: $140 k+
Top-20 % households: $200 k+ after tax (≈ $250 k gross)
Typical upper-quintile wealth: $3 million
If your pay-packet or household spreadsheet lands above those lines, the ABS, ATO and most social researchers would slot you into the country’s upper class—even if it sometimes still feels middle-of-the-road when you’re paying $7 coffees in Melbourne or $15 lettuce in Broome.
Remember, though, that class is more than dollars: stability, opportunity, education and even postcode prestige all play a role. Still, next time someone asks, you’ve got the numbers at your fingertips.
The post How much you have to make to be considered upper class in Australia appeared first on DMNews.
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