Franking credits explained: a plain-English guide for Australian investors

15 June 2026 · Metrifly team · Updated 22 June 2026

A Metrifly dividend dashboard thumbnail showing cash dividend, franking credit and grossed-up income.

If you own Australian shares, you’ve probably seen “franking credits” on a dividend statement and wondered what they actually do. The short version: they stop the same profit being taxed twice, and for some investors they turn into a cash refund. This guide explains how they work, with a worked example, and how to keep track of them at tax time.

This is general information, not tax advice. Check your own situation with a registered tax agent or the ATO.

What is a franking credit?

When an Australian company earns a profit, it pays company tax (usually 30%, or 25% for a base-rate entity). When it then pays you a dividend out of that already-taxed profit, it attaches a franking credit — also called an imputation credit — representing the tax it already paid.

This is Australia’s dividend imputation system. The idea is simple: profit shouldn’t be taxed once in the company’s hands and again in yours. The franking credit is your share of the tax already paid, and you use it to offset the tax on that dividend.

A dividend can be:

The gross-up, with a worked example

You declare the grossed-up amount — the cash dividend plus the franking credit — not just the cash. You’re taxed on that total, and the franking credit comes off your tax bill.

Take a $70 fully franked dividend at the 30% company tax rate:

StepAmount
Cash dividend you receive$70
Franking credit attached$30
Grossed-up (taxable) income$100

The franking credit is calculated as:

franking credit = cash dividend × (company tax rate ÷ (1 − company tax rate))

At 30%, that’s $70 × (0.30 ÷ 0.70) = $30. You declare $100 of income, and you have a $30 credit to put against the tax on it.

For a partially franked dividend, you scale the credit by the franked percentage. A 50%-franked $70 dividend carries half the credits — $15.

Who comes out ahead?

What happens next depends on your marginal tax rate, because the franking credit is a refundable tax offset:

This is why franked dividends are especially valuable to low-rate investors and SMSFs — the credits can become a refund rather than just an offset.

What your broker statement does not show clearly

The hard part is rarely one dividend. It is the year-end reconciliation:

RecordWhy it matters
Cash dividendThe amount paid to you or reinvested through a DRP.
Franked amountThe part of the dividend that carries credits.
Unfranked amountStill assessable income, but no credit is attached.
Franking creditThe refundable tax offset and the amount included in the gross-up.
Payment date and holding periodNeeded when checking whether the 45-day rule is relevant.

If you hold ETFs, the dividend-like cash distributions can also arrive with AMMA statement components after 30 June. That is where many spreadsheets go wrong: the cash paid during the year is not always the final taxable income figure.

Two rules worth knowing

The 45-day holding rule. To claim franking credits, you generally need to hold the shares “at risk” for at least 45 days (90 days for certain preference shares), not counting the days you bought and sold. It’s designed to stop people buying just before a dividend and selling straight after to harvest the credits.

The small shareholder exemption. If your total franking credits for the year are $5,000 or less, the 45-day rule doesn’t apply to you. Most individual investors fall under this threshold.

How to track franking credits

Across a real portfolio — multiple holdings, DRPs, partially franked dividends, dividends paid through the year — adding this up by hand is tedious and error-prone.

For capital gains, see capital gains tax on shares or estimate one sale with the CGT calculator. For EOFY prep, see our EOFY checklist.

Summary

Franking credits are the imputation system working as intended: company tax already paid, passed through to you, used to avoid double taxation — and refunded when your rate is low enough. Declare the grossed-up amount, apply the credit, mind the 45-day rule if your credits top $5,000, and let your portfolio tracker do the per-dividend arithmetic.

Try the franking credit calculator, then start tracking for free.