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Can I Get JobSeeker Payment If My Partner Earns $3,000 Per Fortnight?

Your partner earns $3,000 per fortnight. Here's exactly how that affects your JobSeeker Payment under the partner income test. Based on March 2026 rates.

Last verified: 16 March 2026
NO

Partner income too high — JobSeeker Payment is $0

The partner income cut-off for JobSeeker Payment is approximately $2,320.17/fortnight. Your partner's income of $3,000/fn exceeds this.

Your Estimated JobSeeker Payment

JobSeeker Payment couple rate$693.10
Reduction from partner income test- $693.10
Your fortnightly payment$0.00

How the Partner Income Test Works for JobSeeker Payment

Partner: $3,000
$0Free area: $1,165.00Cut-off: ~$2,320.17

Your partner can earn up to $1,165.00/fn before your JobSeeker Payment is affected (partner income free area).

Above $1,165.00: your payment reduces by 60c per dollar of your partner's income over the threshold.

This is separate from your own personal income test. Both tests apply — whichever produces the lower payment is the one you receive.

How Much Can YOU Earn?

Your JobSeeker Payment is already $0 from your partner's income alone. Your own personal income doesn't change this outcome — you would need your partner's income to drop below $2,320.17/fn for you to receive any payment.

Single Rate vs Couple Rate

Single rate

$762.70/fn

Couple rate (each)

$693.10/fn

The couple rate is $69.60 less (9% lower) than the single rate. Centrelink assumes coupled partners share living costs. Your actual payment of $0.00/fn is then further reduced by your partner's income.

What If Your Partner Earned $250 More or Less?

Partner $2,750/fn

$0.00

Partner $3,000/fn

$0.00

Partner $3,250/fn

$0.00

Your payment is already $0 — further partner income makes no difference.

Would You Be Better Off Claiming as Single?

If you and your partner have separated but still live at the same address, you may be able to claim as “separated under one roof”. This means:

  • You'd receive the single rate of $762.70/fn instead of the couple rate of $693.10/fn
  • Your former partner's income would no longer affect your payment
  • You'd need to provide evidence of separation (separate finances, sleeping arrangements, social life, etc.)

Important: You must genuinely be separated. Falsely claiming separation is fraud and carries serious penalties. Centrelink may interview both parties and check evidence.

Payments Your Partner's Income Doesn't Affect

Some government payments are not affected by your partner's income:

  • Family Tax Benefit Part A — based on combined family income (annual), not fortnightly partner income test
  • Family Tax Benefit Part B — based on the lower earner's income only (up to ~$6,497/year)
  • Child Care Subsidy — based on combined family income but assessed annually
  • Medicare Safety Net — based on family out-of-pocket costs, not income
  • NDIS — not income or asset tested
  • State energy rebates — generally tied to holding a concession card, not partner income

Even if you lose your JobSeeker Payment due to partner income, check if you qualify for these other payments.

General information and estimates only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Always verify with Services Australia.