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QLD 2026 Enterprise Bargaining Agreement: Pay Rises, Conditions and Impacts for Teachers

Key Changes in the Landmark QLD Teachers EBA 2026

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    Understanding the Queensland 2026 Enterprise Bargaining Agreement

    The Enterprise Bargaining Agreement (EBA), also known as EB11 for state school staff, represents a pivotal collective agreement negotiated between the Queensland Department of Education and the Queensland Teachers' Union (QTU), along with other employee representatives. This legally binding document outlines pay scales, working conditions, allowances, and professional development opportunities for approximately 55,000 educators across Queensland's state schools, including K-12 teachers, principals, guidance officers, and support roles in early childhood and special education settings. Effective from early 2026, the QLD 2026 Enterprise Bargaining Agreement introduces targeted reforms to address longstanding challenges like teacher shortages and workload pressures, following intense negotiations marked by member ballots, industrial actions, and government concessions.

    In the context of Queensland's vast geography—from bustling Brisbane suburbs to remote outback communities—the EBA plays a crucial role in standardizing conditions while providing incentives for hard-to-staff areas. Negotiations kicked off in February 2025 amid rising concerns over real wage erosion and a national teacher attrition rate hovering around 50% within five years of graduation. By March 2026, overwhelming ballots secured the deal for many groups, backdating pay rises and paving the way for implementation from January 2026.

    The Road to Agreement: A Timeline of Negotiations

    The journey to the QLD 2026 EBA was fraught with tension. Initial government offers in mid-2025, proposing 3% rises in 2025 followed by 2.5% in 2026 and 2027, were rejected by QTU members as insufficient against forecasted wage growth and inflation. This sparked protected industrial actions, including 24-hour stop-work meetings on August 6 and November 25, 2025, affecting thousands of schools statewide.

    Key milestones included:

    • June 2025: First formal offer rejected.
    • July 28, 2025: Department seeks Queensland Industrial Relations Commission assistance.
    • October 26, 2025: Enhanced 'historic' offer tabled, promising every classroom teacher over $100,000 by agreement's end.
    • October 31, 2025: Member ballot fails narrowly.
    • December 2025: Further refinements amid arbitration talks.
    • March 13, 2026: Ballots succeed for support staff; teachers' terms locked in shortly after.

    This step-by-step process exemplifies enterprise bargaining under the Fair Work Act, where unions submit logs of claims—QTU's demanded 10% annual pay hikes, reduced class sizes, and dedicated planning time—leading to compromises that balance fiscal constraints with workforce needs.

    Salary Reforms: Breaking Down the New Pay Scales

    At the heart of the QLD 2026 Enterprise Bargaining Agreement are substantial salary uplifts totaling 8% over three years, plus conditional Consumer Price Index (CPI) adjustments up to 10.5% cumulative. These are backdated where applicable, ensuring no loss from delays. A landmark change eliminates the lowest entry pay point (Band 2 Step 1), boosting graduate starting salaries to $90,833 annually from January 2026—equivalent to one progression step higher, plus superannuation and incentives.

    Band/ClassificationStep 1Step 2Step 3Step 4
    Band 1 (Entry/Support)$80,000$82,800--
    Band 2 (Classroom Teachers)$90,833$95,200$99,700$104,400
    Band 3 (Experienced)$109,200$113,600$118,100$121,800

    Progression occurs annually within bands based on satisfactory performance, with advancement to higher bands via accreditation, leadership, or qualifications. Three-year trained teachers now align faster with four-year peers. Senior Teachers commence around $122,000, while new Experienced Senior Teacher (EST) levels reach $132,033 (EST3) from July 2027, reduced service requirement from three to two years.

    For context, a first-year primary teacher in Brisbane might earn $90,833 base + 12.75% super + locality allowances, totaling over $105,000 effective package in regional TR2 schools.

    Enhanced Allowances and Incentives for Retention

    Beyond base pay, the EBA introduces practical incentives:

    • Regional Attraction: $900 payment retained for 2026 in Teacher Housing Priority (TR2/TR3) areas; $1,000 new for TR3 in 2027; cash-out options for remote service leave.
    • Camp Allowance: $100 per night for voluntary school camps (Streams 1-3).
    • Beginning Teacher Bonus: $400 replaces registration reimbursement.
    • Aboriginal/Torres Strait Islander Roles: Automatic progression for community teachers after 12 months.
    These target Queensland's acute shortages, where 50% of graduates exit within five years and overseas approvals doubled recently.

    Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

    Workload and Safety Improvements

    Recognizing burnout as a key attrition driver, the agreement establishes a Safety Taskforce addressing occupational violence, equipment shortages, and fatigue. Student Free Days (SFD) reform from 2027 relocates two days for better planning: one to Term 4 end, one to summer holidays. Mandatory PD hours refine to 25 annually, with five teacher-led (minimum two hours). For early childhood and special ed, these reduce non-contact pressures, allowing more student-focused time.View full EB updates on Dept site.

    Real-world example: In Far North Queensland schools, enhanced safety protocols could mitigate violence incidents, which rose 20% pre-EBA per reports.

    Addressing Teacher Shortages Through the EBA

    Queensland faces persistent vacancies, with high graduate attrition and ageing workforce. The EBA's pay floor above $90,000 positions QLD competitively—starting salaries now rival NSW ($92k projected) but lag WA ($88k+ incentives). By elevating beginners and seniors, it aims to stem outflows; principals note faster vacancy fills post-announcement, from 1.35% rate.

    In TAFE and early childhood, aligned uplifts support holistic workforce stability, with TAFE starts at $78k progressing to $113k.

    Stakeholder Views and Multi-Perspective Analysis

    QTU President hailed it as 'unity's win' after strikes, emphasizing conditions over pay alone. Education Minister Langbroek called it 'landmark,' backdating rises for fairness.Official ballot statement. Principals Association praised retention incentives, while critics note it falls short of 10% claims amid CPI forecasts.

    Balanced view: Positive for K-12 retention, but monitoring needed for implementation in remote TAFE sites.

    Comparisons: State Schools vs Catholic, TAFE, and Interstate

    Catholic agreements (2023-2026 extended) mirror with 7% from 2026, graduates $86.5k fortnightly equivalent. TAFE: $78k-$113k, industry credits accelerate.

    StateGraduate Start 2026Top Classroom
    QLD$90,833$121,800+
    NSW$92,882$130k+
    WA$88,178$147k
    VIC$79,589$118k

    QLD mid-pack, strong on incentives.

    Photo by Vitaly Gariev on Unsplash

    Implications for Schools, Students, and Families

    Stable staffing enhances learning: Fewer disruptions in early childhood programs, consistent TAFE vocational paths. Parents in Gold Coast or Cairns benefit from retained experts. Future: Review clauses ensure adaptability to enrollment growth.

    Next Steps and Actionable Advice for Educators

    Check OnePortal for updates; calculate personal impact via salary calculators. Aspiring teachers: Accelerated entry boosts viability. Track via QTU resources.

    This EBA fortifies Queensland education's foundation, blending competitive pay with sustainable conditions.

    Portrait of Dr. Sophia Langford

    Dr. Sophia LangfordView full profile

    Contributing Writer

    Empowering academic careers through faculty development and strategic career guidance.

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