Home » Recommended » Partner Content » Why Australian Enterprises Choose WageSafe over External Auditors for Continuous Payroll Compliance
,

Why Australian Enterprises Choose WageSafe over External Auditors for Continuous Payroll Compliance

Across Australia’s increasingly complex industrial relations system, payroll compliance has moved well beyond a routine back-office task; it’s now a central part of how organisations manage risk and governance. The Fair Work Ombudsman recovered more than A$500 million in unpaid wages in 2024, its highest figure on record, and from January 2025, intentional wage underpayment became a criminal offence. These developments have forced employers, particularly large corporations, to rethink how they validate their payroll systems.

Traditionally, many organisations have relied on external auditors to review payroll accuracy once or twice a year. But that model has become ill-suited to an environment defined by weekly award changes, intricate enterprise agreements, and heightened director liability. It is here that WageSafe, a Sydney-based compliance technology company, has gained traction by offering real-time, automated monitoring of every pay cycle.

“Annual audits might uncover an issue that’s been repeating for months,” said Mark Jenkins, Chief Executive Officer of WageSafe. “By then, the exposure is already substantial. Our goal was to give enterprises the ability to identify discrepancies before they occur, not months later.”

Why External Audits Fall Short

External payroll audits have long provided assurance to boards and regulators, but their limitations are visible. Auditors typically review a small sample of pay records, often long after the pay runs occur, which means systemic errors can go unnoticed until penalties or back payments surface.

According to Fair Work data, more than 70 per cent of businesses inspected in 2024 were found to have some level of non-compliance, most linked to misinterpreted awards or allowance miscalculations. For companies employing tens of thousands of casual and shift workers, such as those in retail or hospitality, even minor rule misapplications can compound into millions in liabilities.

Auditors also face structural constraints. They depend on the same data that payroll systems produce, rather than independent real-time feeds. And while audit reports provide retrospective clarity, they rarely offer predictive insights or continuous feedback loops for payroll teams to self-correct.

“The issue isn’t the auditors’ competence, it’s timing,” Jenkins explained. “Payroll doesn’t wait six months. When you’re processing hundreds of thousands of hours a week, compliance has to move at the same pace.”

The Case for Continuous Payroll Compliance

WageSafe’s model flips the sequence. Instead of waiting for an external review, its software integrates with existing payroll and time-and-attendance systems via API, validating each pay run against relevant awards and agreements before payments are processed.

The platform’s award interpretation engine automatically converts Fair Work rules such as overtime rates, penalty rates, and allowances into algorithmic computations. This allows companies to detect under- or over-payments instantly. Since launching, WageSafe has reportedly analysed over one million wage records and processed billions of dollars in payroll, serving more than 1,200 businesses across Australia.

Its dashboard ranks compliance status using a colour-coded scale: red for urgent action, amber for watchlist, and green for compliant—making it easier for HR and finance teams to interpret risk without external assistance. The technology also flags both underpaid and overpaid wages, addressing a problem few manual audits catch.

Industry analysts point out that such systems not only reduce exposure but also cut administrative costs. Continuous monitoring removes the need for recurring audit engagements while freeing internal payroll staff from routine manual checks.

Accountability at Board Level

With wage underpayment now a criminal offence, boards are demanding more than annual sign-offs from auditors. Directors want evidence-based assurance that compliance controls operate continuously. This demand aligns with WageSafe’s model: automated logs, immutable audit trails, and data-backed compliance reports that can be reviewed at any time.

Executives say this form of “always-on” verification aligns more closely with broader corporate-governance trends. Just as cybersecurity and financial controls are monitored in real time, payroll compliance is expected to meet similar standards of transparency.

“There’s been a fundamental change in accountability,” Jenkins noted. “Directors can no longer say, ‘We thought it was fine.’ They need ongoing visibility, and that’s what real-time systems provide.”

For many organisations, external audits remain a requirement under governance or certification frameworks, but they are no longer sufficient on their own. Instead, enterprises increasingly pair external reviews with continuous internal validation – a hybrid model where technology fills the gaps left by traditional oversight.

The Emerging Standard

Australia’s shift toward continuous payroll compliance reflects a broader movement toward preventive governance – identifying risks as they form rather than after the fact. For large employers, the choice is less about replacing auditors and more about modernising assurance.

WageSafe’s rise shows how automation and data integrity are redefining compliance as an ongoing process rather than a periodic report. The company’s experience mirrors a wider recalibration of responsibility: from external consultants to internal systems that run every hour of every pay cycle.

As Jenkins summarised, “Compliance shouldn’t be an annual event. It should be a daily condition of doing business.”

Digital Editions


  • Countdown to rodeo action

    Countdown to rodeo action

    THE Berriwillock Rodeo is gearing up for another action‑packed weekend, with excitement building across the Mallee as the countdown begins. Just one week out from…

More News

  • Big catches signal healthy waters

    Big catches signal healthy waters

    MURRAY cod numbers are on the rise along Gunbower Creek and the wider Murray River system, with environmental water flows and on ground habitat works credited for healthier native fish…

  • Green thumbs for sustainability program

    Green thumbs for sustainability program

    AS the school bell rings in a new year, Swan Hill classrooms are being called to answer a different kind of roll call – sustainability. Sustainability Victoria is inviting local…

  • Webster returns to shadow ministry

    Webster returns to shadow ministry

    FEDERAL Member for Mallee Anne Webster has returned to the shadow ministry, a week after Liberal stalwart Sussan Ley was toppled as leader. Dr Webster has been re-appointed to the…

  • She’s back: independent quick to stake claim in Farrer

    She’s back: independent quick to stake claim in Farrer

    A PROMINENT independent political candidate has put her hand back as a hopeful for the Federal seat of Farrer, following the current MP and former Coalition leader Sussan Ley’s dramatic…

  • Mother terrified in attempted car jacking

    Mother terrified in attempted car jacking

    A SWAN Hill woman who threatened a mother with a screwdriver in a supermarket carpark says she is determined to rebuild her life. Lilli Buckman, 28, appeared via video link…

  • Scooter rider struck by car

    Scooter rider struck by car

    AN e-scooter rider was taken to hospital with minor injuries after being struck by a car about 9.15am Wednesday. The female rider in her 30s was travelling west on Pye…

  • Striking background for fundraiser

    Striking background for fundraiser

    THE Mallee community gathered on Friday evening for Haeuslers’ Strings and Sunset, a fundraiser celebrating the successful delivery of Project X-Ray at Sea Lake and Ouyen. Hosted by the Foundation…

  • Country championships

    Country championships

    COUNTRY Victoria’s rising basketball talent was on full display in Bendigo over the weekend, with the Flyers’ U16 girls reaching the semi-finals and the U18 girls finishing runners-up, in a…

  • Golden opportunity for future

    Golden opportunity for future

    THE Victorian Farmers Federation has called on the State Government to make strategic investments in agriculture, saying smarter policy and targeted funding in seven priority areas could supercharge the industry…

  • Safety a priority

    Safety a priority

    EVERY farmer deserves to come home safely at the end of the day. That is the message at the heart of a new statewide campaign urging Victorian farmers to see…