Centrelink Preclusion Period Explained | HFI Financial Advice Australia

Centrelink & Compensation · Specialist Financial Guidance

Centrelink Preclusion Period:
What It Means for Your Financial Future

You’ve received a lump sum after an injury or TPD claim and now you’ve been told Centrelink payments could be paused for months or years. What do you do with that money? How do you make it last? That’s where specialist financial advice becomes critical.

50%
Consent settlement rule
6+
Payment types affected
Pre-settlement
When advice matters most
Separate
TPD & compensation rules

Understanding the basics

What Is a Centrelink Preclusion Period?

Receiving a compensation payment is often the result of years of pain, legal stress, and financial uncertainty. But for many Australians, settlement day brings a new and unexpected problem: Centrelink pausing your income support payments, sometimes for a year or more.

This is called a preclusion period. It does not mean your Centrelink entitlement has been cancelled permanently. It means Centrelink has calculated that your compensation lump sum is sufficient to support you for a defined period of time, and your payments are paused until that period expires.

The preclusion period is one of the most commonly misunderstood consequences of a compensation settlement. How long it runs, when it starts, and what you can do to protect your financial position — that is what this guide covers.

Income support payments affected

  • Disability Support Pension (DSP)
  • JobSeeker Payment
  • Carer Payment
  • Age Pension
  • Parenting Payment
  • Youth Allowance

What is not affected

  • Low Income Health Care Card — still available during a preclusion period
  • Your partner’s own Centrelink payments — a preclusion period does not extend to your partner
  • NDIS support — governed by a separate Compensation Reduction Amount (CRA) calculation

Compensation types that can trigger it

  • Workers compensation lump sum settlements
  • Common law personal injury settlements
  • Motor vehicle accident compensation
  • Medical negligence settlements
  • Dust disease settlements
  • Some structured settlements

Two mechanisms to understand

  • The compensation charge — recovers past Centrelink payments made while you were also entitled to compensation
  • The preclusion period — pauses future Centrelink payments for a calculated period
  • Both can apply to the same settlement simultaneously
  • They are separate calculations with different consequences
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Personal injury settlement? There may also be a super contribution opportunity.

If your settlement is for personal injury, there is a 90-day window from settlement to make a superannuation contribution outside the normal caps. This opportunity is separate from the preclusion period and is often missed entirely. Learn about the 90-day super rule for personal injury settlements.

The formula explained

How Long Is Your Preclusion Period?

The length of your preclusion period depends on how your settlement was reached and how the economic loss component is documented. Here is how the calculation works.

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Consent settlements — the 50% rule

For most agreed settlements, Centrelink applies 50% of the economic loss component in the formula. The rationale is that consent settlements are often discounted for litigation risk, and the adjustment reflects that uncertainty.

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Contested court judgments

Where compensation is awarded by a court or tribunal, the full economic loss component is used — no 50% discount applies. The formula uses the exact amount the court determined was your economic loss.

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When the period starts

The preclusion period runs from the date the injury occurred, not from the date you received the payment. Part of the period may already have elapsed by the time settlement is finalised — which may work in your favour.

The formula: Economic loss component (or 50% of it for consent settlements) divided by the ordinary time weekly earnings divisor = number of weeks precluded. Services Australia updates the divisor periodically — always verify the current figure before making financial decisions.

Worked example — a $200,000 workers compensation settlement

Total consent settlement amount$200,000
Economic loss component identified in settlement deed$120,000
50% rule applied (consent settlement)$60,000
Ordinary time weekly earnings divisor (2025 — verify with Services Australia)~$1,222.30
Preclusion period calculated ($60,000 divided by $1,222.30)approximately 49 weeks
Key point: The 49-week period runs from the date of injury, not the date the money arrived. If the injury occurred 40 weeks ago, only 9 weeks of preclusion remain. If the injury was recent, your income support could be paused for close to a year. Understanding when the clock started is critical to your financial planning.

* The divisor is reviewed by Services Australia. Use the Compensation Estimator for an indicative calculation before settlement.

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The settlement deed wording matters

How the settlement is documented and itemised directly affects how Centrelink calculates the preclusion period. A settlement that clearly separates heads of damage — distinguishing economic loss from general damages, for example — can result in a shorter preclusion period. This is a conversation to have with your lawyer before the deed is signed, and ideally with a financial adviser at the same time.

Payments and entitlements

What Payments Are Affected?

The preclusion period affects most Centrelink income support payments, but not all Centrelink payments and not all forms of assistance.

1

Income support payments are paused

These include the Disability Support Pension, JobSeeker, Carer Payment, Age Pension, Parenting Payment, and Youth Allowance. If you are receiving any of these at the time of settlement, Centrelink will cancel or suspend them for the duration of the preclusion period and may also raise a compensation charge for past payments.

2

The Low Income Health Care Card remains available

Even during a preclusion period, you can apply for a Low Income Health Care Card. This provides access to cheaper prescription medicines and some health services. It is one of the few concession-based entitlements that is not blocked by the preclusion rules.

3

Your partner is not subject to the preclusion period

The preclusion period applies to the compensation recipient only. If you have a partner, they may still be able to receive their own Centrelink income support payments, depending on their individual circumstances and the relevant means tests.

4

NDIS is a separate system with its own rules

If you are an NDIS participant, compensation payments may trigger a Compensation Reduction Amount (CRA), calculated by the NDIA, not Centrelink. The CRA and Centrelink preclusion period are separate calculations operated by separate agencies. A single settlement can trigger both simultaneously, which is why coordinated pre-settlement advice matters.


You must notify Centrelink

  • You are legally required to notify Services Australia when you receive a compensation payment
  • In many cases, the insurer or compensation payer also has a notification obligation
  • Failure to notify can result in debts and overpayment recovery
  • Notification timing can affect the practical impact of the preclusion period

Coordination matters at settlement

  • If you are receiving Centrelink payments and a settlement is imminent, timing is critical
  • Your lawyer and financial adviser should be communicating before the deed is signed
  • The Services Australia Compensation Estimator can help estimate the preclusion length pre-settlement
  • A specialist financial planner can help with reporting strategy and next steps

When funds run short

What If You’re in Financial Hardship During Your Preclusion Period?

The preclusion period assumes you can live off your compensation lump sum for its duration. But circumstances change, and if they do, there are provisions available.

⚠️ The single most important thing to understand about hardship

It is very difficult to access Centrelink support if your compensation funds are exhausted before your preclusion period ends. Services Australia can exercise discretion in genuine hardship cases, but the threshold is strict and the application requires evidence. The best approach is to plan carefully from the day you receive the settlement, not after the money runs out.

This is exactly the kind of situation where early financial advice makes a concrete difference.

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Special circumstances waiver

Under the Social Security Act 1991, Services Australia has discretion to waive or reduce a preclusion period in cases of special circumstances. The law is strict — the threshold is set at genuinely not being able to meet reasonable and necessary household expenses.

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What evidence is required

You must demonstrate your current financial position, not the original settlement amount. This typically includes a detailed Statement of Financial Circumstances, bank statements, evidence of liabilities, and an explanation of how the compensation funds have been spent.

What hardship relief looks like

Centrelink may reduce or end the preclusion period early, allowing income support to resume. In some cases a partial reduction is granted rather than a full waiver. Outcomes depend entirely on individual circumstances and the evidence presented.

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The review and appeal process

Preclusion period decisions can be internally reviewed by an Authorised Review Officer. Decisions are rarely changed without strong grounds. If the internal review is unsuccessful, you can appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. Legal or financial advice before lodging a review significantly improves outcomes.

Careful budgeting and cashflow planning during the preclusion period is not optional — it is essential. How you structure and draw down on the lump sum over the preclusion period has direct implications for your financial position when income support resumes. HFI can help with this planning from the start.

HFI specialist area

TPD Claims and the Preclusion Period — What’s Different?

TPD insurance and compensation settlements are governed by different rules. Understanding which rules apply to your situation and how they interact is one of the most important things to clarify before any financial decisions are made.

TPD Specialist Guidance

A TPD payout from super is not the same as a compensation settlement

A TPD insurance payment paid from a superannuation fund is generally not treated as a compensation payment for Centrelink’s preclusion period rules. This means a TPD payout received through your super fund does not, by itself, trigger a preclusion period.

However, there are important exceptions and related issues that need careful analysis:

  • If you also receive a common law damages settlement alongside your TPD claim, the compensation preclusion rules may apply to the damages component
  • A TPD lump sum can still affect income and asset tests once it is paid out of super, which may reduce or cancel income support through a different mechanism
  • If your TPD payout is structured correctly through a complying trust, the capital may be exempt from the assets test, preserving Centrelink eligibility that would otherwise be lost
  • The timing of the TPD rollout from super and how assets are held can determine whether Centrelink entitlements are maintained or lost
  • For NDIS participants, a TPD payment may still trigger a Compensation Reduction Amount calculation through the NDIA, which is a separate process from Centrelink entirely

This is precisely where specialist post-TPD financial advice adds real value — the interaction between TPD payouts, super, Centrelink means tests, and preclusion period rules requires careful analysis that is specific to your situation.

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If your settlement also includes a personal injury component

Where a settlement involves both a TPD claim and a personal injury compensation component, there may be a separate opportunity to contribute part of the personal injury payment to super outside the normal caps. This must be done within 90 days of settlement. Learn about the 90-day super rule for personal injury settlements.

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Related: Post-TPD financial advice

HFI has a dedicated service for clients who have received a TPD approval. The preclusion period interaction is one of several issues reviewed as part of this work. Learn more about HFI’s Post-TPD Advice service.

Working with HFI

How a Financial Planner Can Help

The financial impact of a preclusion period depends heavily on how the settlement is structured, the timing of Centrelink reporting, and how assets are held before and after the payment is received. Getting advice before settlement is finalised is almost always more valuable than seeking help after the fact.

HFI works with clients receiving compensation settlements at the pre-settlement stage, not only after the money has landed. Advice at this stage can change outcomes in a way that is very difficult to achieve once a settlement deed is signed and funds have been distributed.

We also work with clients who have already settled and are now navigating the preclusion period, helping with budgeting, asset structure, hardship provisions, and planning for when income support resumes.

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Settlement documentation review

How the settlement is itemised affects how Centrelink calculates the preclusion period. We work alongside your lawyer to ensure the deed is structured in a way that accurately reflects the nature of the payment and minimises unintended consequences.

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Timing of Centrelink notification

The timing of when you report a settlement to Centrelink and the sequence in which steps occur can have material consequences. We help coordinate this to avoid unintended overpayment debts or delayed access to payments.

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Asset structuring and cashflow planning

How the lump sum is held and drawn down during the preclusion period directly affects your overall financial position, your asset test position when income support resumes, and your long-term wealth outcome. We plan this from day one.

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Centrelink eligibility protection

For clients with long-term disability, maintaining Centrelink eligibility, including DSP, Carer Payment, and concession cards, is a significant financial objective. We identify and implement lawful strategies to protect that eligibility through settlement and beyond.

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Hardship waiver assistance

If a hardship waiver is relevant to your situation, we can help you understand the threshold, prepare the application, and present your financial position in a way that gives the application the best chance of success.

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Full situation review

The preclusion period is one of several financial issues arising from a compensation settlement. We review the complete picture — income, assets, superannuation, insurance, Centrelink entitlements, and NDIS where relevant — to give you a clear plan forward.

Frequently asked questions

Common Questions About Centrelink Preclusion Periods

These are the questions our clients most commonly ask when navigating a compensation settlement and its Centrelink implications.

A Centrelink preclusion period is a period during which your income support payments are paused because Centrelink has determined that a compensation lump sum you received is sufficient to support you for a defined period of time. It does not permanently cancel your entitlement — payments resume once the period expires.
For consent settlements, Centrelink uses 50% of the economic loss component, divided by the ordinary time weekly earnings divisor set by Services Australia (approximately $1,222.30 in 2025 — verify before acting). For court judgments, the full economic loss component is used. The period runs from the date of injury, not from the date of payment. Always confirm the current divisor with Services Australia before making financial decisions.
A TPD insurance payment paid from a superannuation fund is generally not treated as a compensation payment for preclusion purposes, so it does not directly trigger a preclusion period. However, if your settlement also includes a common law damages component, the preclusion rules may apply to that component. TPD payouts can also affect the assets test once paid out of super, which may separately affect your Centrelink eligibility. Specialist advice before finalising any settlement is strongly recommended.
In genuine financial hardship, Services Australia has discretion to waive or reduce the preclusion period under special circumstances provisions in the Social Security Act 1991. You must demonstrate that you cannot meet reasonable and necessary household expenses based on your current financial position. This requires detailed evidence of your financial situation. The threshold is strict, and decisions are rarely changed, which is why proactive planning from the day of settlement is so important.
Yes. A Low Income Health Care Card can be applied for even during a preclusion period. It provides access to cheaper prescription medicines and some health services. This is one of the few concession-based entitlements that is not blocked by the preclusion period rules.
The preclusion period applies to the compensation recipient only — it does not extend to your partner. Your partner may still be eligible to receive their own Centrelink income support payments during your preclusion period, depending on their individual circumstances and the relevant income and assets tests.
Yes. You can request an internal review of the preclusion period decision through an Authorised Review Officer within 13 weeks of the decision. If unsuccessful, you can appeal to the Administrative Appeals Tribunal. In hardship cases, you can also apply for a special circumstances waiver to reduce the period. Preclusion period decisions are rarely changed without strong grounds — specialist financial or legal advice before lodging a review significantly improves your prospects.
Before settlement is finalised — ideally before the settlement deed is signed. How the settlement is documented, the timing of Centrelink notification, and how assets are structured can all materially affect the preclusion period outcome and your broader financial position. HFI works with clients at the pre-settlement stage to identify and address these issues before they become problems.

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Book a consultation to understand your options.

The decisions made around settlement and in the weeks immediately after have long-term consequences for your financial position, your Centrelink eligibility, and your ability to plan ahead. Speak with the HFI team before making any financial decisions.

General information only. This content does not constitute financial, legal or social security advice. Centrelink preclusion period thresholds, divisors, and rules change over time and must be verified with Services Australia before acting. Outcomes depend entirely on individual circumstances.

Health & Finance Integrated is a Corporate Authorised Representative of Able Financial Services (ABN 27 646 319 164) AFSL 530596. Shop 6, 23 Hassall St, Parramatta NSW 2150. Any advice in this website is general in nature and has been prepared without considering your objectives, financial situation or needs.