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What the Resolution Scheme is
The Income Apportionment Resolution Scheme (the Resolution Scheme) offers compensation for people to recognise that income apportionment was not consistent with the social security law at the time.
This will be through one-off payments of up to $600 for each eligible debt affected by income apportionment.
The amount you’re eligible for will depend on the total value of your debt as at 30 January 2026. If you’ve already repaid money towards the debt, this won’t affect the amount of your Resolution Scheme payment.
The table below shows how much you may receive for each eligible debt.
| Total debt value | Resolution Scheme payment amount |
|---|---|
| Less than $200 | Full debt amount |
| $200 - $1,999 | $200 |
| $2,000 - $4,999 | $400 |
| $5,000 or more | $600 |
Resolution Scheme payments aren’t taxable and won’t be assessed as income. You don’t need to report your Resolution Scheme payment to us.
Who is eligible for the Resolution Scheme
You may be eligible for the Resolution Scheme if all the following apply:
- you received an employment income debt for a debt period between 20 September 2003 and 6 December 2020
- your debt was likely to be affected by income apportionment and raised before 5 December 2025
- you haven’t been prosecuted and found guilty of fraud in relation to your debt
- your debt has not been previously waived in full or zeroed before 30 January 2026.
You can apply for the Resolution Scheme if your employment income debt was affected by income apportionment between 20 September 2003 and 6 December 2020.
If you have multiple eligible debts, you can apply for a Resolution Scheme payment for each debt.
To check if you’re eligible, follow the steps to apply for the Resolution Scheme.
How to apply for the Resolution Scheme
Applications for the Resolution Scheme open on 30 January 2026 and close on 29 January 2027.
If your Centrelink online account is linked to myGov you can apply online. To do this, sign into myGov, select Money you owe, and then select Apply for Resolution Scheme. If you have eligible debts, they will show here.
If you don’t have a myGov account or a Centrelink online account, you’ll need to create them.
When you submit an application online for the Resolution Scheme, we’ll give you a receipt ID and send you a confirmation letter.
You can also call us and apply over the phone. Contact us on the Income Apportionment line.
You’ll also need to call us on this line if:
- you only want to apply for a Resolution Scheme payment for some of your eligible debts
- you can’t see a debt listed that you think should be eligible.
Let us know if you need an interpreter and we’ll arrange one for free.
When we’ll contact you
After your claim has been submitted, we’ll contact you from July 2026 to let you know if you’ll get a payment and the amount.
You can choose to accept or decline the Resolution Scheme payment.
How the Resolution Scheme impacts your legal rights
If you choose to accept a Resolution Scheme payment for a debt, you’ll be agreeing to all the following:
- to release the Commonwealth from all liability for claims regarding the use of income apportionment to calculate your debt
- not to bring, or continue, any legal action in relation to the Commonwealth’s use of income apportionment in raising that debt
- not to seek compensation in relation to that debt.
We recommend seeking independent legal advice if you’re concerned about the impact of accepting an offer of a Resolution Scheme payment.
Applying for the Resolution Scheme doesn’t impact your right to review or appeal your debt. This means that you can still seek review of the decision to raise the debt or the decision to recover the debt.
Download the Income Apportionment Resolution Scheme factsheet.
Contact numbers available on this page.
Income apportionment line
Use this line if we’ve written to you about a debt or review related to income apportionment.
There are other ways you may want to contact us.