6-K
IPERIONX Ltd (IPX)
UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549
FORM 6-K
REPORT OF FOREIGN PRIVATE ISSUER
Pursuant to Rule 13a-16 or 15d-16 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
Date: September 30, 2025
Commission File Number: 001-41338
IperionX Limited
(Translation of registrant’s name into English)
129 W Trade Street, Suite 1405
Charlotte, North Carolina
(Address of principal executive offices)
Indicate by check mark whether the registrant files or will file annual reports under cover of Form 20-F or Form 40-F.
Form 20-F ☒ Form 40-F ☐
EXHIBIT INDEX
The following exhibits are filed as part of this Form 6-K:
| Exhibit | Description |
|---|---|
| 99.1 | Annual Report |
SIGNATURE
Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, the registrant has duly caused this report to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized.
| IPERIONX LIMITED | ||
|---|---|---|
| (registrant) | ||
| Date: September 30, 2025 | By: | /s/ Marcela Castro |
| Name: Marcela Castro | ||
| Title: Chief Financial Officer |
Exhibit 99.1

IperionX Limited ABN 84 618 935 372 Redefining titanium for the modern world Annual Report 2025

IperionX is a leading American titanium metal and critical materials company. Letter to Shareholders FY25 Highlights 02 06 Overview 08 Titanium Products 12 Titanium Markets 14 IperionX’s Titanium Technologies Sustainability 16 22 Directors’ Report 26 71 Auditor’s Independence Declaration Consolidated Statement of Profit or Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity 74 Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows 75 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 76 Consolidated Entity Disclosure Statement 111 Directors’ Declaration 112 Independent Auditor’s Report 113 Mineral Resources Statement 118 Corporate Governance 119 ASX Additional Information 120 Loss and Other Comprehensive Income 72 Glossary of Terms and Definitions 123 Consolidated Statement of Financial Position 73 Corporate Directory 125

IperionX is using patented metal technologies to produce high performance titanium alloys, from titanium minerals or scrap titanium, at lower energy, cost and carbon emissions. Our Titan critical minerals project is the largest JORC‑compliant mineral resource of titanium, rare earth and zircon minerals sands in the U.S. 01

Taso Arima CEO & Managing Director Dear Fellow Shareholders, IperionX was founded by a team with a powerful idea – make titanium affordable and sustainable – and this dedicated team are executing on this mission. In FY25 we decisively moved from development to production, commissioning our Virginia titanium commercial‑scale operations, strengthening our U.S. funding base, and proving a faster, lower‑cost, more resilient A better way to make – and use – titanium For over 80 years, the Kroll titanium production process has constrained titanium to high‑performance and high‑cost applications. Our patented HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies invert that old model – producing high‑quality titanium powder directly from titanium scrap or mineral feedstocks, and then consolidating this powder into high‑performance near‑net‑shape, forged‑quality titanium parts with far higher yields, lower energy, and zero direct (Scope 1 and 2) emissions. In short: improved titanium production process, with fewer process steps, higher production yields, and significantly lower costs. During the year we successfully commissioned titanium operations at our Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. Innovative process improvements lifted our nameplate production capacity by 60% to ~200 tpa, without additional capex, and lowered our projected steady‑state unit costs to ~US$55/kg. We also defined the next step in our titanium scale‑up: a seven‑fold expansion to ~1,400 tpa by mid‑2027, supported by U.S. Government funding that positions IperionX to the largest and lowest cost U.S. titanium powder producer, with targeted unit costs of ~US$29/kg at full scale. Funding to support U.S. defense industry priorities Our momentum to re‑shore a lower‑cost, high‑performance U.S. titanium supply chain is accelerating. In FY25, IperionX was awarded up to US$47.1 million under the U.S. DoW IBAS program, including US$37.5 million obligated after year‑end for long‑lead equipment to accelerate our titanium production in Virginia. We also secured an SBIR Phase III contract providing a US$99 million task‑order ceiling and received a US$1.3 million first order from the U.S. Army. Todd Hannigan Executive Chair Letter to Shareholders 02

Capital markets and shareholder support followed our technology lead and growing momentum: we completed ~US$70 million equity placements to fund long‑lead items and fast‑track the titanium production expansion schedule. Commercial traction and a growing titanium product range Our titanium product roadmap targets fasteners, brackets, gears and actuators, and electronics enclosures – these are high ‘buy‑to‑fly’ titanium parts where our near‑net‑shape technologies and economics could unlock +80% cost reductions versus legacy titanium manufacturing routes. Customer engagement accelerated over the year. We now count ~100 active potential customer programs and significantly progressed high‑potential commercial opportunities across the luxury, consumer electronics and defense sectors. We signed a large supply contract with Ford for titanium powder and manufactured components. Safety, sustainability, and circular titanium supply chains Our Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus runs on 100% renewable power and our patented HAMR™ process can use 100% titanium scrap – enabling closed‑loop titanium circularity at scale. We finished the year with zero lost-time injuries, producing 100% U.S.‑made recycled titanium powder with an estimated >90% lower footprint versus conventional titanium powders, based on independent LCA studies. The Titan Critical Minerals Project: securing titanium mineral feedstocks and mineral‑to‑metal integration To underpin long‑term growth and security of domestic supply, we advanced our leading Titan Project in Tennessee – one of the largest U.S. titanium, rare earth and zircon mineral sand resources – and commenced a U.S. Government‑funded Definitive Feasibility Study. Our proprietary Green Rutile™ and ARH™ process technologies can upgrade titanium minerals to +99% TiO₂ feedstock for our HAMR™ process, creating a fully‑integrated, American mineral‑to‑metal supply chain. ~$70m equity placements completed Letter to Shareholders 03

Results that compound FY25 was a year of execution and growing market recognition. We commissioned, expanded capacity, improved our projected unit costs, grew our customer pipeline, and strengthened the balance sheet for accelerated titanium manufacturing growth. 2026 priorities: scale, customers, cash generation Our priorities are clear: Ramping Virginia to industrial‑scale titanium output, while executing our U.S. Government funded seven‑fold expansion to ~1,400 tpa by mid‑2027; Scale customer contracts across defense, mobility, electronics, and industrials – prioritizing high-margin, high‑yield, near‑net‑shape titanium components; and Keep lowering the cost curve: Scale resets the titanium cost curve – our patented titanium technologies scale efficiently, cutting process steps, increasing manufacturing yields at lower energy and capital intensity. Leverage our structural cost advantage and push titanium toward value‑in‑use competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. Why this matters Steel had Bessemer. Aluminum had Hall‑Héroult. Titanium’s constraint was never the metal – it was the high‑cost Kroll production process. With our patented HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies deliver that moment: a titanium manufacturing platform with higher yields, fewer process steps, lower energy intensity, and lower costs. As cost falls and productivity rises, titanium’s use‑cases expands – from aerospace and defense to EVs, electronics, robotics, marine, and beyond. This is how specialty metals become mainstream. To our employees, thank you for the persistence and ingenuity that got us here safely. To our customers, partners, communities, and shareholders – thank you for your trust and alignment. We enter FY26 with momentum and a disciplined plan to scale a leading American titanium platform – where our breakthrough technologies and team are the edge. With appreciation, Anastasios (Taso) Arima Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Todd Hannigan Executive Chair ~7x increase in targeted production by mid‑2027 04

Letter to Shareholders 05

2020-21 Company formation Acquisition of the Titan Critical Minerals Project ASX listing Initial rights to the titanium technologies 2021-22 Technical validation of the titanium technologies Pilot facility operations, Utah Commencement of customer engagement Nasdaq listing 2022-23 Continued pilot facility operations and first commercial contracts Virginia site selected for commercial scale up Patent portfolio growth U.S. Air Force titanium recycling challenge First UL validated 100% recycled titanium Production of titanium metal from Tennessee minerals Titan Project Scoping Study 2023-24 R&D 100 award Expansion of customer base Development and commissioning of commercial operations First $12.7 million U.S. Department of War award Team and leadership growth FY25 was a breakthrough year for IperionX, representing the inflection point between project development and commencement of commercial operations; re‑shoring a domestic U.S. titanium supply chain. FY25 Highlights 06

Ramp up of commercial operations in Virginia Complete acquisition of breakthrough titanium technologies − Full acquisition of the intellectual property portfolio to secure the exclusive commercial rights to breakthrough titanium technologies. U.S. Government funding to secure titanium supply chain − Secured $47.1 million in funding under the Department of War’s Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment (IBAS) program to expedite the Titan Critical Minerals Project and facilitate vertical integration at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus. Receipt of $99 million Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase III Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity Contract − SBIR Phase III contract enables IperionX to receive task order funding from U.S. Government, with task orders to focus on manufacturing high‑performance titanium fasteners for U.S. DoW agencies. First Army task order under SBIR − Received the first task order, valued at $1.3 million, from the U.S. Army under the SBIR Phase III contract with the DoW. Accelerated expansion of U.S. titanium production − U.S. DoW backed expansion by mid‑2027 has commenced, to become the largest volume and lowest cost U.S. producer of titanium. Commencement of Titan Project Definitive Feasibility Study − Definitive Feasibility Study (DFS) is underway at the Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee, a major step toward developing a fully integrated, mineral‑to‑metal U.S. titanium supply chain. $99m SBIR Phase III contract awarded 2024-25+ 07 FY25 Highlights

Overview IperionX is a leading American titanium metal and critical materials company – using patented titanium technologies to produce high performance titanium alloys, from titanium minerals or scrap titanium, at lower energy, cost and carbon emissions. 10,000 tpa target production by 2030 IperionX’s award‑winning patented technology portfolio enables high strength forged titanium alloy products at low cost, with class‑leading sustainability and superior process energy efficiencies when compared to current industry methods such as the Kroll process. Using its technologies, IperionX has now transitioned to be a commercial producer of titanium metal products in the United States. IperionX produces low‑cost and high‑quality angular and spherical titanium powder, which is used to produce near‑net‑shape and final titanium parts through powder metallurgy or additive manufacturing. These technologies provide IperionX with a sustainable competitive advantage and significant value uplift from upgrading raw titanium materials through to finished high‑performance titanium products when compared to traditional titanium industry supply chains. Operations are underway to re‑shore a low cost, sustainable, U.S. titanium supply chain Titanium has superior material properties that are prized across advanced industries, including high strength, light weight and corrosion resistance. However, the U.S. no longer produces any primary titanium metal (i.e. titanium sponge), including for defense, with China and Russia controlling around 75% of global supply. IperionX is now actively re‑shoring a low‑cost, sustainable U.S. titanium supply chain, through the commercialization of its titanium technologies and its commercial operations in Virginia. Commissioning of initial commercial operations is complete; an order of magnitude scale up is now underway IperionX has demonstrated commercial‑scale titanium production, with the commissioning and commencement of commercial operations at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia, United States, at a rate of 125 metric tons per year, and has detailed its plans to scale up to 1,400 metric tons per year in 2027. Global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high‑performance titanium components IperionX is aiming for global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high‑performance titanium components of +10,000 tpa by 2030, and has developed a plan to scale titanium capacity in high‑performance titanium components, targeting cost competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. 08

60% Increase in initial titanium powder capacity from 125 tpa to 200 tpa Commencement and scale up of commercial operations Commercial scalability validated by higher titanium production capacity and lower unit costs Titanium powder production commenced in 2024, and nameplate capacity has increased by 60% from 125 metric tons per year (tpa) to 200 tpa, driven by operational and technology process improvements with no additional capex. Projected titanium powder unit costs fall to ~US$55/kg at full utilization, from prior estimates of US$75/kg. U.S. Department of War (DoW) backed expansion by mid‑2027 has commenced, to become the largest volume and lowest cost U.S. producer IperionX is accelerating a 7x expansion in titanium production capacity to 1,400 tpa, positioned to be the largest volume and lowest‑cost American titanium powder producer, targeting titanium powder unit cost of ~US$29/kg at full utilization. The expansion has a low‑capital intensity, with capex of ~US$75 million, including contingency, funded by U.S. DoW award of US$47.1 million, existing cash of US$54.8 million as of June 30, 2025, capital raise of US$46 million in July, 2025, and DoW SBIR Phase III task orders of US$99 million. Accelerated growth targets global market and cost leadership in high‑performance titanium components IperionX is aiming for global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high‑performance titanium components of +10,000 tpa by 2030, and has developed a plan to scale titanium capacity in high‑performance titanium components, targeting cost competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. Overview 09

$60m in funding and grants received to date through U.S. DoW programs Continued U.S. Government funding to re‑shore a domestic titanium supply chain The U.S. government continues to support IperionX’s efforts to re‑shore a secure domestic titanium supply chain, building upon the initial US$12.7 million contract awarded to IperionX in 2023. As of the date of this report, the Company has been awarded ~US$60 million in funding and grants through the U.S. DoW DPA Title III and IBAS programs. IperionX awarded $47.1 million by the U.S. DoW to secure U.S. titanium supply chains In February 2025, IperionX was awarded a contract for up to US$47.1 million in funding by the U.S. DoW to strengthen the U.S. Defense Industrial Base by accelerating development of a resilient, low‑cost, and fully‑integrated U.S. mineral‑to‑metal titanium supply chain. As part of the initial phase, the DoW obligated US$5 million through the Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program to expedite the Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee to ‘shovel‑ready’ status. In August 2025, the U.S. DoW obligated a further US$12.5 million under the US$47.1 million award to be applied to purchase orders for long‑lead, major capital equipment required for the next stage of capacity scale‑up to over ~ 1,400 metric tons per year at the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. Major incremental capacity categories include titanium deoxygenation, sintering and powder metallurgy consolidation systems; near‑net‑shape component manufacturing and ancillary infrastructure upgrades. In September 2025, the Company announced that the DoW obligated an additional US$25.0 million to the previously announced US$47.1 million award. This US$25.0 million obligation, along with the prior US$12.5 million and US$5.0 million, takes total obligations to US$42.5 million, with the remaining US$4.6 million expected to be obligated over the contract term. IperionX executed a U.S. DoW SBIR Phase III contract for up to US$99 million In June 2025, IperionX executed a Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) Phase III contract with the U.S. DoW. Structured as an Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity contract in support of achieving “Low‑Cost Domestic Titanium for Defense Applications” in the U.S., the contract establishes a funding mechanism through which qualifying U.S. Government agencies can place project‑specific task orders – collectively capped at US$99 million – for the supply of IperionX titanium components and parts. 10

Zero direct carbon emissions Shortly after the SBIR Phase III contract execution, IperionX received the first task order, valued at US$1.3 million, from the U.S. Army for the production and delivery of titanium parts for U.S. Army ground vehicle programs. Strategic advantages Fully integrated, lower‑cost and sustainable solution via patented titanium technologies IperionX’s HAMR™ titanium production technology provides a lower‑energy, faster and lower temperature process to produce titanium, with energy consumption <50% vs. current industry, and zero direct carbon emissions. The HSPT™ “forging” technology, is a non‑melt, advanced sintering technology that delivers forged quality titanium products. HAMR™ and HSPT™ can lower the cost, energy, and yield loss of producing titanium products, and can produce titanium near‑net‑shape products at significantly higher yields and lower cost, unlocking a circular and zero direct carbon emission titanium supply chain. IperionX’s proprietary mineral upgrading technologies, Green Rutile™ and ARH™, can add value to titanium minerals to produce low‑cost and high‑purity titanium feedstock for our HAMR™ titanium production facilities. The largest commercial producer of primary titanium metal in the U.S. IperionX’s advanced HAMR™ furnace was successfully commissioned at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in August 2024, marking the first titanium deoxygenation production run. IperionX successfully increased production by ~60 times from pilot scale to 125 metric tons per year, producing high performance titanium that exceeds industry quality standards, and has subsequently further increased capacity to 200 metric tons per year through operational improvements. Rapid expansion of operations, supported by the U.S. Government The U.S. government is investing significant resources to re‑shore a secure domestic titanium supply chain that is currently dominated globally by China and Russia. IperionX is well positioned to benefit from these resources to scale titanium production and manufacturing capacity. The US$47.1 million award in February of 2025 through the IBAS program builds upon the US$12.7 million in funding previously awarded under the DoW’s DPA Title III Program, as well as up to US$99 million in contract awards under the SBIR Phase III program. The awards have allowed IperionX to commence scale up plans to 1,400 metric tons per year in 2027, aiming to be a leading U.S. titanium producer of +10,000 metric tons per annum by 2030. Future integration using upgraded minerals from Titan Projects’ titanium mineral resources The fully permitted Titan Project in Tennessee is one of the largest titanium mineral resources in North America, as well as a leading U.S. resource of zircon and rare earth critical minerals. The Titan Project, combined with our patented titanium mineral upgrading technologies, has the potential to deliver an innovative end‑to‑end solution for a U.S. titanium supply chain, providing significant strategic value for defense and advanced manufacturing. IperionX is currently undertaking a definitive feasibility study on the Titan Project, funded by the DoW, and expected to be complete in Q2 2026. Overview 11

Titanium Products IperionX intends to target high‑value, high ‘buy‑to‑fly’ ratio titanium components, in the form of near‑net‑shape and manufactured products. By leveraging cost advantages from patented HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies, IperionX expects a material cost reduction across a range of titanium product categories, including fasteners, enclosures and controls, consumer electronics, gears and actuator housings, and titanium brackets. Other titanium product categories include mill replacement products, and high‑value additive manufactured parts. IperionX titanium metal product map and current market price range estimates US$180-400/kg US$50-120/kg US$1,000+/kg Powder Manufacturing Powder Consolidation Binder Jet US$50-150/kg Fasteners Enclosures and Controls Gears and Actuators Brackets Mill Products Complex Products Titanium Scrap Titanium Powder HSPT & THRM HAMR Uniaxial Press US$7-30/kg Cold Isostatic Press US$4-15/kg Laser Powder Bed Fusion US$100+ Target Products 12

Titanium fasteners Fasteners — bolts, screws, nuts, washers, rivets — are ubiquitous across major U.S. markets in automotive, construction, aerospace, marine, and industrial machinery. Titanium fasteners represent a large addressable market for IperionX. Leveraging our integrated patented technologies and near‑net‑shape manufacturing, IperionX modelling indicates scope for product cost reductions of over 80%, and in some cases more than 90%, versus current market levels. The global titanium fastener market is ~US$4.3 billion1 annually, with the global stainless steel fastener market ~US$15.2 billion2 annually. Lower‑cost titanium fasteners, priced competitively with stainless steel, could unlock accelerated substitution, volume growth and a larger addressable market. Enclosures and controls (consumer electronics) The premium consumer electronics market is adopting titanium at scale, with leading global brands adding titanium to flagship devices. Over 1.2 billion3 mobile phones and 180 million3 smartwatches are sold every year. IperionX offers a fully circular titanium supply chain that can convert consumer‑electronics titanium scrap into high‑quality titanium powder and titanium near‑net‑shape components, at lower energy, cost and environmental footprint. Our first commercial project is already in progress to deliver into this market. Verified Market Research – Titanium Alloy Fasteners Market report. Verified Market Research – Stainless Steel Fasteners Market report. Statista – Global smartphone/smartwatch sales to end users 2007‑2023. Goldman Sachs – The global market for humanoid robots could reach US$38 billion by 2035. Gears and actuators (humanoid robotics) The humanoid robotics market is forecast to expand from under US$3 billion today to more than US$38 billion4 by 2035. Core to these systems are lightweight, strong, corrosion‑resistant gears and actuators — ideal for titanium and perfectly suited to our uniaxial press‑and‑sinter manufacturing route, which mirrors traditional steel powder metallurgy gear production. Titanium brackets Titanium brackets are the natural complement to titanium fasteners across aerospace, marine, and construction — combining high strength, low weight, and exceptional corrosion resistance. Mill products Although not central to our market product plan, IperionX’s powder metallurgy process can produce near‑final‑gauge titanium plate, sheet, and bar after sintering – bypassing large portions of the titanium melt‑forge‑roll chain. Multiple industry partners are collaborating to quantify the cost and efficiency gains. High‑value additive manufactured parts For strategic programs and customers, we will manufacture high‑value complex titanium parts via Laser Powder Bed Fusion (LPBF) and E‑Beam Powder Bed Fusion (EB‑PBF), smaller in output but with high‑value margins. As the expected lowest cost U.S. titanium‑powder producer, IperionX will strengthen the additive manufacturing supply chain and deliver lower‑cost advanced manufactured titanium parts. 13 Titanium Products

Titanium Markets Automotive and transport Consumer electronics Aerospace and defense Titanium and its alloys are used in high‑performance applications across a wide range of advanced industries. Titanium alloys are prized for their strength, lightweight, and high resistance to corrosion. 14

IperionX’s technologies produce lower‑cost and high‑quality titanium metal powder that can be used to produce titanium semi‑finished stock products, near‑net forged titanium alloy shapes and high‑performance final titanium parts. A significant reduction in the end‑to‑end cost of manufacturing titanium parts has the potential to increase the application of titanium to a wider range of markets. Energy Medical Luxury goods Industrial Titanium Markets 15

The technology portfolio consists of over 40 global patents related to the innovative titanium technologies. IperionX is developing a range of innovative new technologies that are related to the core technologies and titanium manufacturing. IperionX is uniquely positioned to re‑shore a fully integrated mineral‑to‑metal titanium supply chain to the U.S. IperionX has developed an innovative ‘end‑to‑end’ American titanium supply chain solution, that spans from the production of domestically sourced titanium minerals, the technology to upgrade these minerals to +99% TiO2, as well as the ability to utilize the largest range of recycled scrap titanium as feedstocks for low‑cost titanium metal production. Titanium is a superior metal in many applications to both steel and aluminum, but its high production and manufacturing cost often limits its use to high performance applications. IperionX’s Titanium Technologies IperionX’s world‑leading portfolio of patented titanium technologies has been developed, enhanced and protected over a decade of research and development. 16

Vacuum Arc Remelting Chlorination Forging Rolling Products Machining Up to 10 forging / rolling steps Feedstock Reduction & Distillation Current Industry Products Feedstock IPX HAMR Process IPX HSPT Process Machining Titanium Minerals Titanium Sponge (<95% yield)1 Titanium Ingot (<85% yield)2 Titanium Mill Products (~50–75% yield)2,3,4,5 Titanium Products (~5–15% yield)2,3,4 Titanium Scrap and/or Mineral Titanium Powder Titanium Mill Products (~85–95% yield) or Near Net shapes (~85% yield) Titanium Products (~50-80% yield) IperionX titanium products surpass industry standard Grade 5 specifications Refer to ASX release dated 15 August 2024 for further information. The incumbent industry titanium production method is the Kroll Process which is an energy and capital‑intensive batch process that has limited titanium’s market penetration to advanced applications. The Kroll Process is also complex, requiring toxic reagents and repeated high temperature melting processes. Over the years, the search for a more efficient lower‑cost production method for titanium has failed to meet quality requirements, cost reduction needs or commercial scalability. In contrast, IperionX’s patented titanium technologies feature lower energy consumption, lower capex, faster cycle times and higher product yields – produced from either titanium minerals or scrap – to produce low‑cost and high‑quality angular and spherical titanium powder to produce titanium semi‑finished stock products for advanced applications. IperionX can also use these titanium powders to produce near‑net forged titanium alloy shapes and high‑value final titanium parts and components using additive manufacturing. The interlocking series of patented titanium technologies span the full supply chain and offers a vertical integration platform. These technologies provide IperionX with the capacity to re‑shore a fully integrated mineral‑to‑metal titanium supply chain to the U.S. IperionX’s innovative ‘end‑to‑end’ American titanium supply chain solution spans from the production of domestically sourced titanium minerals, the technology to upgrade those minerals, as well as the ability to utilize recycled scrap titanium as key feedstocks for low‑cost titanium production and manufacturing. IperionX has proven the capability of the patented titanium technologies to upgrade titanium minerals from the Titan Project in Tennessee to produce high grade +99% TiO2, and then successfully use this enriched feedstock to manufacture high‑quality spherical titanium alloy (Ti‑6Al‑4V) powder. Quality testing of this spherical titanium powder surpassed industry standard Grade 5 specifications for oxygen content. IperionX’s Titanium Technologies 17

HAMR™ Titanium Technologies The HAMR™ titanium production process is a proprietary breakthrough technology originally developed at the University of Utah with funding from the U.S. Department of Energy’s ARPA‑E program. HAMR™, which stands for Hydrogen Assisted Metallothermic Reduction, is a patented powder metallurgy process technology to produce titanium and other metal powders. This process can take almost any form of titanium minerals or scrap titanium feedstock and produce titanium powders at low energy intensity, enabling the potential for low‑cost, low‑carbon emission titanium production in a sustainable closed loop. The majority of the energy and emissions savings are realized by eliminating the need to chlorinate titanium dioxide (TiO2) to make titanium tetrachloride (TiCl4) and removing the need for vacuum distillation after the reduction of TiCl4. The HAMR™ process uses powder metallurgy processing steps to control the size of the particles, add alloying elements, to produce high‑quality titanium powder. The HAMR™ process destabilizes TiO2 using hydrogen, making it possible to turn the reduction of TiO2 with magnesium from being thermodynamically impossible to thermodynamically favored. This allows TiO2 to be reduced and deoxygenated directly by magnesium to form TiH2 with low oxygen levels to meet industry quality standards. TiH2 is then processed into titanium metal alloys for advanced market applications. IperionX Titan Project ilmenite (LHS) prior to conversion to low carbon, high grade synthetic rutile (RHS). 18

HSPT™ Titanium Forging Technologies The patented Hydrogen Sintering and Phase Transformation (HSPT™) technology enables the low‑cost production of near‑net‑shape and additively manufactured titanium parts with similar properties to traditional forged or wrought parts. In traditional wrought manufacturing, multiple energy intensive and expensive forging and machining steps are required to produce a titanium bar, plate, or sheet, and the subsequent machining required to make a part by subtractive manufacturing results in significant levels of scrap generation. While powder metallurgy and additive manufacturing generate less waste and can be lower‑cost alternatives to traditional manufacturing, titanium parts manufactured by these alternative approaches typically have poor mechanical properties and often rely on expensive post‑sintering thermal mechanical processing. In contrast, the patented HSPT™ ‘forging’ technology yields a wrought‑like ultrafine grain microstructure to produce titanium products with superior fatigue properties versus traditional titanium powder metallurgy methods. IperionX uses its patented HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies with powder metallurgy to manufacture high‑performance forged titanium products. By combining powder metallurgy or additive manufacturing with the HSPT™ processing technology, IperionX produces near‑net‑shape titanium parts with an ultra‑fine‑grain microstructure. These parts have the potential to be produced at significantly lower cost and with greatly reduced scrap generation, while achieving material performance properties similar to those produced by forging. IperionX’s Titanium Technologies 19

GSD™ Technologies The Granulation‑Sintering‑Deoxygenation (GSD™) process is a patented thermochemical technology designed to produce spherical titanium powders for 3D printing and additive manufacturing. This innovative process significantly enhances production efficiency, increasing powder yield by up to 50%, while delivering spherical titanium powders with low oxygen content, precise particle size control, and excellent flowability. In contrast, existing methods for producing spherical metal powders – such as gas atomization, plasma atomization, and the plasma rotating electrode process – face significant limitations. While gas and plasma atomization can generate fine powders, their final product yield is low after size classification. A common challenge across all these methods is the low production yield of fine powders, which is a key driver of the high cost of titanium powder in additive manufacturing. GSD™ technology addresses these limitations, offering a more efficient and cost‑effective solution for high‑quality titanium powder production. The HAMR™ technologies offer the capability to directly manufacture advanced alloys from the oxides of alloying elements. These technologies enable the use of alloying elements like iron, niobium, zirconium, and molybdenum etc. to create titanium alloys with enhanced strength, ductility, and fatigue performance. The HAMR™ technology offers advantages to manufacture advanced metal alloys that are difficult to produce at scale using traditional methods, such as melt processes. Titan ilmenite (~60% TiO2) +99% TiO2 Ti‑6AI‑4V 20

Green Rutile™ and ARH™ Technologies IperionX’s proprietary mineral upgrading technologies, Green Rutile™ and ARH™, can add value to titanium minerals to produce low‑cost and high‑purity titanium feedstock for use at HAMR titanium production facilities. The proprietary Green Rutile™ process upgrades lower grade titanium minerals into higher‑grade synthetic rutile titanium product plus a co‑product of purified iron oxide powder that could be used for metal alloying or produced as a pre‑cursor for Lithium Iron Phosphate batteries. Most of global synthetic rutile production is based upon the incumbent Becher Process, which consists of roasting lower‑grade ilmenite titanium minerals using coal as a reductant in a rotary kiln at temperatures of more than 1,100°C to convert the iron oxide in the ilmenite to metallic iron, and then ‘rusting’ the kiln product in an aerated salt solution to remove most of the metallic iron. The Scope 1 and 2 emissions from the current production of synthetic rutile and titanium slag are significant, estimated at approximately 3.3 tons and 2 tons of CO2 equivalent per ton of product. In contrast, IperionX’s Green Rutile™ process does not use coal as a reductant, and when combined with renewable or low‑carbon sourced electricity, has the potential to result in high‑quality titanium product with low carbon emissions. IperionX is advancing plans to scale‑up the Green Rutile™ enrichment technology to upgrade lower grade ilmenite titanium minerals from the Titan Project into a high‑quality synthetic rutile titanium product and iron oxide powder co‑product. IperionX’s patented Alkaline Roasting and Hydrolysis (ARH™) technology can further upgrade rutile titanium minerals, including Green Rutile™, to +99% titanium dioxide (TiO2) feedstock so that it can be used as a high‑purity feedstock for the HAMR™ titanium production process. IperionX’s Titanium Technologies 21

Overview IperionX believes that a sustainable economy and the technologies of the future will assist to drive increased demand for critical minerals and metals, including titanium. IperionX’s technologies bypass the high‑cost, high‑carbon Kroll Process and the energy intensive titanium melt processes and forging. IperionX’s core patented technologies can provide a more sustainable and circular titanium metal supply chain compared to the current titanium supply chain. Sustainability Governance and Disclosures IperionX was founded with the mission to build an end‑to‑end, low cost, and sustainable titanium supply chain in the United States. Sustainability is governed from the highest levels of IperionX’s management, with the Sustainability Sub‑Committee overseeing all related initiatives, including the Annual Sustainability Report and annual sustainability goals. IperionX reports annually on its sustainability progress following Global Reporting Initiative, the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board, and the Task Force on Climate‑related Financial Disclosures guidance. Sustainability IperionX’s core patented technologies can provide a more sustainable and circular titanium metal supply chain compared to the current titanium supply chain. 22

100% titanium scrap utilized Social Responsibility IperionX values its employees and local communities in Virginia, Utah, Tennessee and North Carolina. Protecting the health and safety of all our stakeholders, including our employees, contractors, visitors, and communities, is a core value of IperionX and fundamental to our future success. IperionX takes the responsibility of creating a safe workplace for employees seriously, ensuring compliance with applicable occupational and environmental health and safety laws and regulations governing our operations. Sustainable Titanium Technologies IperionX can revolutionize the titanium industry by enabling a truly circular titanium supply chain. Our patented technologies can utilize 100% titanium scrap, including low‑quality (and high‑oxygen) titanium scrap that other processes can’t recycle. Our resulting 100% recycled, high‑quality (and low‑oxygen) titanium powder and parts can be used for a wide variety of applications and industries. Once those products have come to the end of their useful life, the technologies can be used to recycle the post‑consumer titanium again, enabling a true “closed‑loop” and low‑carbon titanium supply chain at scale. By diverting valuable titanium from downcycling – or from yesterday’s waste stream – and upcycling it for new titanium products, we help meet today’s needs for sustainable, domestically sourced critical minerals and help our customers achieve their product circularity and sustainability goals. Low Carbon Footprint IperionX’s sustainable and low‑carbon titanium powders are produced using 100% renewable energy, with zero associated Scope 1 and 2 carbon emissions. The low Scope 3 emissions associated with the titanium production process are being actively managed and have the potential to be reduced via the procurement of low‑carbon process inputs. IperionX completed a comparative life cycle assessment (LCA) to demonstrate the low‑carbon offerings of its spherical titanium powders compared to other conventionally produced metal powders for additive manufacturing. Results of the comparative LCA for climate change impacts indicate that 100% recycled spherical titanium powder to be produced at IperionX’s Titanium Production Facility in Virginia has the potential for a life cycle carbon footprint as low as 7.8 kg of carbon dioxide equivalents (CO2e) per kg of powder. This finding represents over a 90% decrease in carbon footprint when compared to conventional titanium powders produced using the plasma atomization process (estimated to be 88.8 kg CO2e per kg powder). Sustainability 23

Sustainable Mineral Development IperionX is committed to resource efficiency, sustainable land management, and biodiversity at its Titan Project in Tennessee. The Titan Project aims to serve as a global model of sustainability and land stewardship throughout its lifecycle. Once operational, mineral extraction activities at the Titan Project will be low impact, requiring no drilling or blasting. Completing the project in a phased approach with progressive reclamation will minimize our active operations to a small footprint at any given time. We are working with the University of Tennessee Institute of Agriculture to research methods of restoring the land in ways that will improve soil fertility and benefit a biodiverse ecosystem. We are committed to having a net positive impact on the land in all our operations. Environmental Regulation Our operations are subject to various environmental laws and regulations under the relevant government’s legislation. Full compliance with these laws and regulations is regarded as a minimum standard for all operations to achieve. Instances of environmental non‑compliance by an operation are identified either by external compliance audits or inspections by relevant government authorities. There were no known breaches by IperionX during the fiscal year ended June 30, 2025. 24

Financial Report Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income 72 Consolidated Statement of Financial Position 73 Directors’ Report 26 Consolidated Entity Disclosure Statement 111 Auditor’s Independence Declaration 71 Directors’ Declaration 112 Independent Auditor’s Report 113 Mineral Resources Statement 118 Corporate Governance 119 Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity 74 ASX Additional Information 120 Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows 75 Glossary of Terms and Definitions 123 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 76 Corporate Directory 125 25

Directors’ Report The Directors of IperionX Limited present their report on the consolidated entity consisting of IperionX Limited (“Company” or “IperionX”) and the entities it controlled at the end of, or during, the year ended June 30, 2025 (“Consolidated Entity” or “Group”). Directors The names and details of the Company’s directors in office at any time during the financial year or since the end of the financial year are: Mr. Todd Hannigan Mr. Anastasios Arima Ms. Lorraine M. Martin Mr. Vaughn Taylor Ms. Melissa G. Waller Ms. Beverly M. Wyse Mr. Tony Tripeny Executive Chairman Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Lead Independent Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director (appointed March 17, 2025) Unless otherwise stated, Directors held their office from July 1, 2024 until the date of this report. Current Directors and Officers Mr. Todd Hannigan B.Eng (Hons), MBA Executive Chairman Mr. Hannigan was appointed as Non-Executive Chairman of IperionX on February 1, 2021, and as Executive Chairman on May 24, 2021. Todd Hannigan has over 28 years of global experience in natural resources as company founder, chief executive officer, private capital investor and non-executive director. Mr. Hannigan has worked internationally in the natural resources sector including for Piedmont Lithium Inc., Aston Resources, Hanson PLC and BHP Billiton. Mr. Hannigan holds a Bachelor of Engineering (Mining) from The University of Queensland and an MBA from INSEAD. Other Current Public Directorships Executive Chairman Brazilian Rare Earths (January 2023 – present) Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years None 26

Directors’ Report continued Mr. Anastasios (Taso) Arima BCom Chief Executive Officer & Managing Director Mr. Arima is a founder of IperionX and was appointed as Executive Director on December 1, 2020, and as Managing Director and CEO of the Company on March 1, 2021. Anastasios (Taso) Arima has over 15 years of experience in founding and developing critical material companies in North America. Mr. Arima was a founder and director of Piedmont Lithium and was instrumental in the development of the company. Mr. Arima attended the University of Western Australia and earned a Bachelor of Commerce whilst studying for a Bachelor of Engineering. Other Current Public Directorships During the Past Three Years InVert Graphite Limited (formerly Dominion Minerals Limited) (November 2021 – present) Former Public Directorships None Ms. Lorraine M. Martin B.A. (Computational Mathematics), M.Sc (Computer Science) Lead Independent Director President and CEO of the National Safety Council IperionX Director since September 13, 2021 Lorraine M. Martin is a director, President and CEO of the National Safety Council, serving in this position since June 2019. She is also co-founder and President of Pegasus Springs Foundation, a non-profit organization focused on education and mentoring. Ms. Martin is the retired Executive Vice President and Deputy of Rotary and Mission Systems (“RMS”) for Lockheed Martin Corporation, a global aerospace, defense, security and advance technologies company. Prior to RMS, Ms. Martin was Executive Vice President and General Manager for the F-35 Lightning II Program for Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company. Her leadership of the F-35 program earned Pentagon recognition for reducing program costs while increasing production and fielding more aircraft worldwide. She joined Lockheed Martin in 1988 and during her tenure, held a variety of high visibility leadership positions across the corporation. Prior to joining Lockheed Martin, she served as an officer in the U.S. Air Force, holding various leadership positions for software intensive technology and development programs. She has a Master of Science degree in Computer Science from Boston University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Computational Mathematics from DePauw University. Other Current Public Directorships Kennametal Inc. (July 2018 – present) Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years None IperionX Board Committees Lead Independent Director Nominating and Governance Directors’ Report 27

Directors’ Report continued Current Directors and Officers continued Mr. Vaughn Taylor BBus (Accounting), SAFin Independent Non-Executive Director Former Executive Director and Chief Investment Officer of AMB Capital Partners IperionX Director since March 3, 2021 Vaughn Taylor previously served as Executive Director and Chief Investment Officer of AMB Capital Partners, (“AMB”) the global investment platform of the Bennett Family. Mr. Taylor was responsible for executing on the investment strategy, expanding the investment portfolio into international markets and sourcing new investment opportunities. Mr. Taylor is an active global investor and is a board member of a number of listed and private market organizations both in Australia and the U.S. across a range of sectors. Mr. Taylor holds a Bachelor of Business (Accounting) and a Master of Business (Real Estate) from RMIT University. Mr. Taylor also holds a Graduate Diploma in Applied Finance and Investment from Financial Services Professional Body, (“FINSIA”). Other Current Public Directorships Alta Global Group Ltd (August 2021 – present) Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years None IperionX Board Committees Audit Committee Compensation Committee (Chair) Ms. Melissa G. Waller B.A. (Journalism and Mass Communications) Independent Non-Executive Director Former Deputy Treasurer and Chief of Staff for the North Carolina Department of State Treasury IperionX Director since September 13, 2021 Melissa G. Waller has over 30 years’ experience as a senior finance executive and is President for the AIF Institute, providing essential education, research and resources to investors and investment firms globally with over US$50 trillion assets under management. Ms. Waller is the former Deputy Treasurer and Chief of Staff for the North Carolina Department of State Treasury, where she successfully oversaw Department strategic planning, operations, and public-policy implementation, along with a staff of more than 400 employees, including the North Carolina Retirement Systems, the pension fund for the state and the tenth largest public pension fund in the United States, with assets in excess of US$90 billion. Ms. Waller has served as Chair of the Department’s Corporate Governance Committee, as well as on the Council of Institutional Investors Board of Directors and the Governor’s Board of Innovation for the North Carolina University System. She currently serves as Executive Program Director for the National Institute of Public Finance, as well as Director of Public and Private Partnerships for the Kenan Institute. Ms. Waller has a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass communications from the University of North Carolina. Other Current Public Directorships None Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years None IperionX Board Committee Nominating and Governance Committee (Chair) Compensation Committee 28

Directors’ Report continued Ms. Beverly M. Wyse B.Sc. (Mechanical Engineering), MBA Independent Non-Executive Director Former President of Shared Services, Boeing IperionX Director since September 13, 2021 Beverly M. Wyse worked for over 30 years at Boeing, most recently as President of Shared Services, a multi-billion dollar operating group. In that role, she refocused and restructured the organization and also delivered improved efficiency and performance. Previously, she was Vice-President & General Manager of Boeing South Carolina, a major manufacturing, assembly and delivery site for Boeing where she led the team through successful production rate increases, major improvements in workforce relations and significant reductions in operating costs. Throughout her extensive career at Boeing, Ms. Wyse also successfully led the 737, 767 and 787 Charleston programs. Ms. Wyse holds an MBA and a B.Sc. in Mechanical Engineering from the University of Washington. Other Current Public Directorships None Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years Héroux-Devtek Inc. (February 2019 – February 2025) IperionX Board Committees Audit Committee Nominating and Governance Committee Compensation Committee Mr. Tony Tripeny BS (Economics) Independent Non-Executive Director Former Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer of Corning Incorporated IperionX Director since March 17, 2025 Tony Tripeny brings over 40 years of financial and operational leadership in advanced manufacturing, technology and materials science. Mr. Tripeny’s successful 36-year career at Corning Incorporated, a global innovator and leader in advanced materials science, included senior roles of Executive Vice President and Chief Financial Officer, as well as Senior Vice President and Corporate Controller, until his retirement in 2022. Mr. Tripeny currently serves as a Director at Mesa Laboratories and Origin Materials. He holds an economics degree from the Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania and is a member of both the Financial Executives Institute and the Institute of Management Accounting. Other Current Public Directorships Mesa Laboratories, Inc. (NASDAQ: MLAB) (2022 – present) Origin Materials, Inc. (NASDAQ: ORGN) (May 2023 – present) Former Public Directorships During the Past Three Years None IperionX Board Committees Audit Committee (Chair) Nominating and Governance Committee Directors’ Report 29

Directors’ Report continued Principal Activities The principal activities of the Group during the year consisted of the development of its titanium metal technologies and the development of its mineral properties in the United States. The Group is operating a U.S. based, integrated titanium business to support a range of advanced industries, including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, bicycles, additive manufacturing and automotive. We expect to offer a range of titanium products and alloys for customers across these key industries. Our portfolio of assets includes our operations at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Halifax County, Virginia; our Titan Project in Tennessee, which is in the exploration stage; and IPF R&D center in Salt Lake City, Utah, that together are re-shoring a sustainable titanium supply chain in the U.S. During the 2025 fiscal year, IperionX exercised its exclusive option to acquire certain of the assets of Blacksand, and now owns patents to certain titanium and metal alloy production technologies and holds exclusive global licenses over the Technologies, including hydrogen assisted metallothermic reduction, granulation sintering deoxygenation, low carbon titanium mineral enrichment, hydrogen sintering and phase transformation, alkaline roast and hydrolysis, and other titanium alloying technologies. Operating and Financial Review Introduction IperionX has transitioned to become a leading sustainable producer of titanium products for a wide range of industries. Titanium is prized for its high strength-to-weight ratio and its resistance to high temperatures and corrosion. Titanium is used in numerous advanced industries, including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, industrial, medical, bicycles, hydrogen and automotive. IperionX has developed commercial relationships with a range of customers across these sectors that desire high-performance titanium products via a more sustainable supply chain. IperionX aims to sell titanium products directly to these customers. Our future products may include manufactured titanium components, titanium powders for additive manufacturing and powder metallurgy and traditional mill products. We offer a range of titanium alloys, including aerospace grade titanium alloys and other high performance titanium alloys. Since the 1940’s, titanium has been commercially produced using the Kroll Process, which is a relatively energy and cost-intensive method that produces high levels of greenhouse gas emissions. In contrast, IperionX controls the intellectual property rights to certain patented titanium and metal alloy production technologies which use less energy to produce high-performance titanium products, at lower costs, with zero Scope 1 and 2 emissions, driven by the expected use of 100% renewable energy at our facilities (as reported in our recent life cycle assessment published in June 2024). Today the United States has no commercial domestic primary titanium metal (titanium sponge) production capacity and the U.S. currently imports almost all of the titanium sponge required for its advanced industries. We are re-shoring titanium metal production, thereby reducing America’s acute reliance on primary titanium imports and strengthening the domestic titanium supply chain. To achieve our goals, IperionX has two key value drivers: Titanium Metals: IperionX has successfully scaled and commissioned its first commercial operations using the Technologies to produce high performance titanium alloys and products at lower costs, with zero Scope 1 and 2 emissions, from either scrap titanium or titanium minerals. IperionX is currently ramping up production at its large-scale titanium production facility, in Virginia; and 30

Directors’ Report continued Critical Minerals: IperionX owns the Titan Project in Tennessee, an exploration stage project, which is currently one of the largest titanium, zircon and rare earth mineral resources, reported in accordance with the JORC Code, in the U.S. At full production, we anticipate that the Titan Project could produce approximately 100,000 tons per annum of titanium minerals that could potentially be used as a feedstock to produce 100% American-made titanium alloys. IperionX is currently undertaking a definitive feasibility study on the Titan Project, funded by the U.S. DoW, and expected to be complete in Q2 2026. To meet the growing demand for sustainable and lower cost titanium products, IperionX is ramping up production at its titanium manufacturing facility in Virginia, with first production of deoxygenated titanium achieved in August 2024, and full system commissioning completed in 2025. Technology and process improvements at the titanium manufacturing facility have already lifted nameplate titanium powder capacity from 125 tpa to 200 tpa – and laid the groundwork for a seven-fold scale-up in titanium production to 1,400 tpa in 2027. IperionX is aiming for global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high-performance titanium components of +10,000 tpa by 2030, and has developed a plan to scale titanium capacity in high-performance titanium components, targeting cost competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. To support the potential future growth in titanium production, we also plan to develop the Titan Project in Tennessee to provide low-cost titanium mineral feedstock. In addition, we believe the Titan Project has the potential to be a sustainable, low-cost and globally significant producer of titanium, rare earths and zircon minerals. These minerals are important for advanced U.S. industries including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, bicycles, additive manufacturing, hydrogen and automotive. Why Titanium? Titanium is a strong, lightweight metal with important material properties for applications in consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, bicycles, additive manufacturing, hydrogen and automotive. A range of titanium alloys are recognized for high strength-to-weight ratio and excellent corrosion resistance that exceed many alloys of stainless steel and aluminum. However, titanium’s high production and manufacturing cost has historically been a key factor in hindering its widespread application versus other structural metals such as stainless steel and aluminum. Currently, primary titanium metal is largely produced by the Kroll Process, invented in the 1940s. The Kroll Process works by reducing titanium from titanium tetrachloride with magnesium in a capital and energy-intensive batch process. After primary titanium is produced with the Kroll Process, it must be melted, alloyed and remelted into ingots. The ingots are then processed in a series of manufacturing steps to produce mill products, including consecutive rolling steps, extruding and forging. Mill products can be machined into parts using subtractive methods where large portions of the titanium metal are machined away into scrap. Some mill products are drawn into wire and used in a gas atomization process to produce spherical titanium powders. The United States depends on imported titanium to support its defense and critical infrastructure needs. In 2018, Russian and Chinese titanium sponge producers controlled 61% of the world’s titanium sponge production. By 2024, Russia and China’s control of global titanium sponge production had increased to approximately 75%. IperionX is currently re-shoring an end-to-end titanium supply chain to the United States by vertically integrating the Technologies, and ultimately the Titan Project, to make sustainable, lower cost high-performance titanium. Directors’ Report 31

Directors’ Report continued Operating and Financial Review continued Our Production Facilities Titanium Manufacturing Campus – Virginia IperionX’s Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia comprises the Titanium Production Facility and the Advanced Manufacturing Center. Commissioning of the TPF is complete, which is already producing high-quality and low-cost angular and spherical titanium powders. These titanium metal powders will be marketed to a wide range of customers for use in additive manufacturing and powder metallurgy. The high-quality titanium powders are an important low-cost internal feedstock for the AMC, where they are utilized to manufacture a wide range of higher value titanium products such as semi-finished traditional mill products, near-net-shape forged titanium components and high-value titanium products using additive manufacturing. IperionX’s simple, low waste, vertically integrated solution: Current Industry Up to 10 forging / rolling steps Vacuum Arc Remelting Chlorination Forging Rolling Products Machining Feedstock Reduction & Distillation Products Machining Feedstock IPX HAMR Process IPX HSPT Process Titanium Minerals Titanium Sponge (<95% yield)1 Titanium Ingot (<85% yield)2 Titanium Mill Products (~50–75% yield)2,3,4,5 Titanium Products (~5–15% yield)2,3,4 Titanium Scrap and/or Mineral Titanium Powder Titanium Mill Products (~85–95% yield) or Near Net shapes (~85% yield) Titanium Products (~50-80% yield) Refer to ASX release dated 15 August 2024 for further information. 32

Directors’ Report continued Titanium Production Facility – First Titanium Deoxygenation Production Run Complete In August 2024, IperionX’s HAMR™ furnace successfully completed the first titanium deoxygenation production run at the TPF. The successful titanium deoxygenation production cycle was a significant milestone in the development of HAMR™ technology that has the potential to revolutionize the titanium industry and demonstrates the commercial-scale capabilities of IperionX’s breakthrough titanium deoxygenation technologies. Produced entirely from 100% scrap titanium (Ti-6Al-4V alloy, Grade 5 titanium), quality assessments confirmed a large reduction in oxygen levels from 3.42% to below 0.07%, far exceeding the ASTM standard requirement of 0.2% for Grade 5 titanium. In December 2024, IperionX completed the inaugural “end-to-end” commercial HAMR™ production cycle, efficiently deoxygenating high-oxygen titanium scrap and producing high-quality, low-oxygen titanium metal powder, and in September 2025, IperionX fully commissioned all critical systems at its titanium production facility, demonstrating steady-state production of high-quality, low-cost titanium metal products directly from recycled titanium scrap, using IperionX’s proprietary HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies. Technology and process improvements at the titanium manufacturing facility have already lifted nameplate titanium powder capacity from 125 tpa to 200 tpa – and laid the groundwork for a seven-fold scale-up in titanium production to 1,400 tpa in 2027. IperionX is aiming for global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high-performance titanium components of +10,000 tpa by 2030, and has developed a plan to scale titanium capacity in high-performance titanium components, targeting cost competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. Advanced Manufacturing Center – High-performance Titanium Product Manufacturing IperionX leverages its patented HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies with powder metallurgy to manufacture high-performance forged titanium products at its AMC, also located at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia. The use of powder metallurgy has historically been limited in the titanium industry for two key reasons: Titanium powder manufactured from high-cost titanium billets generates high yield losses for on-spec (low oxygen) titanium metal angular powders. This results in high-cost angular titanium powders, limiting their application for traditional powder metallurgy production processes. Standard argon-vacuum sintering processes used to consolidate titanium powder can produce inferior microstructure, strength and fatigue properties compared to traditional forged titanium products. IperionX’s patented HAMR™ titanium production technology can produce low-cost and high-quality titanium metal angular powders. Importantly, the proprietary HSPT™ ‘forging’ technology yields a wrought-like ultrafine grain microstructure to produce titanium products with superior fatigue properties versus traditional titanium powder metallurgy methods. Capacity at the AMC will also be scaled in order to meet the scaled up titanium powder production of 1,400 tpa in 2027. Directors’ Report 33

Directors’ Report continued Operating and Financial Review continued Our Production Facilities continued Industrial Pilot Facility – Utah The IPF, located in Salt Lake City, Utah, has been producing titanium metal powder with the Technologies since 2019. IperionX has been producing angular and spherical titanium metal powders in ~50-kilogram batches at the IPF for customers and advanced prototyping. Scrap titanium metal is the key titanium feedstock, with renewable power utilized to produce high-quality titanium powder. Production at the IPF has demonstrated that the Technologies can reduce high oxygen content material to very low levels in titanium metal. With the commissioning of the large-scale manufacturing plant, this facility has been re-purposed as an R&D facility. Re-shoring U.S. Critical Mineral Production with the Titan Critical Mineral Project IperionX plans to initially use 100% recycled titanium metal scrap as feedstock for the titanium powder and products produced at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus. However, with high levels of forecast demand growth, IperionX intends to backwards integrate using upgraded titanium mineral feedstock from the Titan Project in Tennessee. The Titan Project has the potential to be a long-term, low-cost and globally significant producer of titanium, rare earth and zircon critical minerals. These critical minerals are required for advanced U.S. industries, including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, additive manufacturing, hydrogen and automotive. Future development of the Titan Project could provide a long-term source for low-cost upgraded titanium feedstocks that, combined with the Technologies, could help establish a fully integrated U.S. titanium supply chain. Vertical integration of the Technologies along with a U.S. supply of critical minerals, including titanium, offers potential long-term competitive and strategic advantages. In February 2025, the DoW obligated US$5 million through the Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program to expedite the Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee to ‘shovel-ready’ status through the completion of a Definitive Feasibility Study, due to be completed in Q2 2026. The Titan Project’s Mineral Resources, reported in accordance with the 2012 Edition of the JORC Code, are as follows: Titan Project Mineral Resources at June 30, 2025 THM Assemblage Indicated Inferred 0.4 0.4 241 190 2.2 2.2 5.3 4.2 11.3 11.7 9.3 9.7 39.7 41.2 2.1 2.2 15.6 13.7 Total 0.4 431 2.2 9.5 11.5 9.5 40.3 2.1 14.8 Mineral resource Cut off grade Material tons THM grade THM tons Zircon Rutile Ilmenite REE Staurolite category (THM %) (Mt) (%) (Mt) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) Environmental Regulation and Performance IperionX’s operations are subject to various environmental laws and regulations under the relevant government’s legislation. Full compliance with these laws and regulations is regarded as a minimum standard for all operations to achieve. Instances of environmental non-compliance by an operation are identified either by external compliance audits or inspections by relevant government authorities. There have been no known breaches by the Group during the financial year. 34

Directors’ Report continued Highlights Highlights during and subsequent to the end of the financial year were as follows: U.S. Government funding to re-shore a domestic titanium supply chain IperionX awarded US$47.1 million by the U.S. DoW to secure U.S. titanium supply chains In February 2025, IperionX was awarded a contract for up to US$47.1 million in funding by the U.S. DoW to strengthen the U.S. Defense Industrial Base by accelerating development of a resilient, low-cost, and fully-integrated U.S. mineral-to-metal titanium supply chain. As part of the initial phase, the DoW obligated US$5 million through the Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment program to expedite the Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee to ‘shovel-ready’ status. In August 2025, the U.S. DoW obligated a further US$12.5 million under the US$47.1 million award to be applied to purchase orders for long-lead, major capital equipment required for the next stage of capacity scale-up to over 1,400 metric tons per year at the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. Major incremental capacity categories include titanium deoxygenation, sintering and powder metallurgy consolidation systems; near-net-shape component manufacturing and ancillary infrastructure upgrades. In September 2025, the Company announced that the DoW obligated an additional US$25.0 million to the previously announced US$47.1 million award. This US$25.0 million obligation, along with the prior US$12.5 million and US$5.0 million, takes total obligations to US$42.5 million, with the remaining US$4.6 million expected to be obligated over the contract term. IperionX awarded U.S. DoW SBIR Phase III contract for up to US$99 million In June 2025, IperionX was awarded a SBIR Phase III contract by the U.S. DoW. Structured as an Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity contract in support of achieving “Low-Cost Domestic Titanium for Defense Applications” in the U.S., the contract establishes a funding mechanism through which qualifying U.S. Government agencies can place project-specific task orders – collectively capped at US$99 million – for the supply of IperionX titanium components and parts. Shortly after the SBIR Phase III contract award, IperionX received the first task order, valued at US$1.3 million, from the U.S. Army under the SBIR for the production and delivery of titanium parts for U.S. Army ground vehicle programs. Customer Engagements Partnership with Aperam to advance a circular titanium supply chain In July 2024, IperionX and Aperam signed an agreement to apply IperionX’s fully circular and sustainable titanium supply chain solution to the consumer electronics sector, with IperionX to use its patented titanium technologies to upcycle up to 12 metric tons of titanium scrap from the consumer electronics sector to manufacture a range of high-performance titanium products. IperionX executes sourcing contract with global automaker In September 2024, IperionX executed a sourcing contract for the supply of manufactured metal components for Ford Motor Company. The term of the Contract runs for 45 months commencing in 2025, with IperionX contracted to supply titanium metal powder and manufacture components. Total revenues from the contract are expected to be ~US$11 million. Directors’ Report 35

Directors’ Report continued Operating and Financial Review continued Highlights continued Customer Engagements continued IperionX secures first U.S. army task order under US$99 million SBIR Phase III contract In June 2025, IperionX received the first task order, valued at US$1.3 million, from the U.S. Army under a SBIR Phase III Indefinite Delivery Indefinite Quantity contract with the U.S. DoW. The task order facilitates the production and delivery of titanium parts for U.S. Army ground vehicle programs. The project was the first of further task orders expected under the US$99 million SBIR Phase III contract, which enables any DoW and U.S. Government agency to support production capabilities to procure titanium parts and materials directly from IperionX. Other ongoing customer engagements and developments Product development and qualification continues to build momentum across key customer sectors – defense, automotive and consumer electronics. There has been very strong customer engagement for high-performance titanium components that suffer from historically low material yields (high scrap rates) – such as titanium fasteners, housings, and precision components. Titanium Manufacturing Campus Development Commissioning of the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia In August 2024, IperionX commissioned the HAMR™ furnace and completed the first titanium deoxygenation production run at the Titanium Production Facility. The successful first titanium deoxygenation production cycle is a significant milestone in the development of HAMR™ technology that has the potential to revolutionize the titanium industry and demonstrates the commercial-scale capabilities of IperionX’s breakthrough titanium deoxygenation technologies. In December 2024, IperionX completed the inaugural “end-to-end” commercial HAMR™ production cycle, efficiently deoxygenating high-oxygen titanium scrap and producing high-quality, low-oxygen titanium metal powder. In September 2025, IperionX fully commissioned all critical systems at its titanium production facility, demonstrating steady-state production of high-quality, low-cost titanium metal products directly from recycled titanium scrap, using IperionX’s proprietary HAMR™ and HSPT™ technologies. Further, process improvements and optimization lifted nameplate titanium powder production capacity by 60% – from 125 tpa to 200 tpa – without additional capital spend. Higher throughput, lower reagent intensity and reduced production cycle times are expected to cut operating costs down to ~US$55/kg. U.S. DoW backed expansion by mid-2027 has commenced, to become the largest and lowest cost U.S. producer In September 2025, IperionX announced that it was scaling titanium production capacity to 1,400 tons per annum, with commissioning targeted for mid-2027 positioning IperionX to be the largest and lowest-cost North American titanium powder producer. The total expansion capital is ~US$75 million, including ~US$14 million in contingency, and is majority funded through the U.S. DoW IBAS award of US$42.1 million, along with IperionX’s balance sheet cash. Additional contract awards under the US$99 million SBIR Phase III program and access to Private Activity Bonds enhance financial flexibility. The titanium production expansion to 1,400 tpa will support a more resilient, sustainable U.S. titanium supply chain, reducing reliance on foreign imports and enhancing national security for advanced industries such as aerospace, defense, and electric vehicles. 36

Directors’ Report continued 2030 roadmap targets global leadership in high-performance titanium components IperionX is aiming for global leadership in advanced manufacturing of high-performance titanium components of +10,000 tpa by 2030, and has developed a plan to scale titanium capacity in high-performance titanium components, targeting cost competitiveness with stainless steel and aluminum. Titan Project Development Definitive Feasibility Study for Titan Project In April 2025, IperionX announced the commencement of a Definitive Feasibility Study for its Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee – the largest mineral resource (reported in accordance with the JORC Code) of titanium, rare earth, and zircon mineral sands in the United States. The DFS, expected to be completed in Q2 2026, will define engineering, flowsheets, and infrastructure for long-term supply of titanium feedstock and heavy rare earths, including dysprosium and terbium – key elements for high-performance magnets and defense systems. This final phase of feasibility is partly funded by an allocation from IperionX’s recent U.S. Government award of US$47.1 million, underscoring the strategic significance of the Titan Project in securing a fully integrated, U.S.-based ‘mineral-to-metal’ titanium supply chain. U.S. Government funding awarded to IperionX since January 2023 now totals over US$60 million. Strategic offtake partners – multiple partners, advanced due diligence Throughout the period, IperionX continued to receive significant interest in the Titan Project’s valuable titanium, rare earth and zircon critical minerals. A major Japanese conglomerate completed bulk sample test work at the Titan Project to advance potential sales offtake and development financing, with subsequent metallurgical test work taking place at an independent laboratory in Australia. A number of other Japanese parties have expressed interest in sales, marketing, and investment proposals focused on the offtake of titanium and rare earth minerals from the Titan Project. Corporate In October 2024, IperionX completed a placement of 31.3 million new fully paid ordinary shares at an issue price of A$3.20 per share to raise A$100 million (approximately US$67 million). Proceeds from the placement are being or were applied to Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus expansions (including studies, equipment and working capital), ongoing Virginia development and operations, acquisition of intellectual property, and for general working capital and corporate purposes. Executive Chairman Mr. Todd Hannigan subscribed for 593,750 shares to raise A$1.9 million (approximately US$1.3 million). In November 2024, IperionX successfully completed the acquisition of the intellectual property portfolio to secure the exclusive commercial rights to the breakthrough titanium technologies. The acquisition secured IperionX’s exclusive commercial rights to the patents and proprietary technologies, including Green Rutile™, Alkaline Roasting Hydrolysis, Hydrogen Assisted Metallothermic Reduction and Hydrogen Sintering and Phase Transformation. In July 2025, IperionX completed a placement of 14 million new fully paid ordinary shares at an issue price of A$5.00 per share to raise A$70 million (approximately US$46 million). The placement allows IperionX to order long-lead capital items and shorten the construction schedule for planned scale-up in titanium production. Subject to shareholder approval, IperionX non-executive directors and executive directors subscribed for 433,230 shares under the placement to raise approximately A$2.2 million (approximately US$1.4 million). Directors’ Report 37

Directors’ Report continued Operating and Financial Review continued Results of Operations The Group’s net loss after tax for the financial year ended June 30, 2025 was US$35.3 million (2024: US$21.8 million). This loss is largely attributable to: Research and development costs of US$12.7 million (2024: US$8.7 million) which is attributable to the Group’s accounting policy of expensing R&D expenses incurred by the Group in connection with the R&D of the Group’s titanium processing technologies, including salaries and related personnel expenses, subcontractor expenses, patent registration expenses, materials, and other related R&D expenses associated with processing operations at our IPF in Utah and Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia; Exploration and evaluation expense of US$2.9 million (2024: US$2.0 million) which is attributable to the Group’s accounting policy of expensing exploration and evaluation expenditure (other than expenditures incurred in the acquisition of the rights to explore, including option payments to landowners) incurred by the Group in the period subsequent to the acquisition of the rights to explore and up to the successful completion of definitive feasibility studies for each separate area of interest; Corporate and administrative expenses of US$10.7 million (2024: US$4.5 million) which is attributable to salaries and wages, overhead costs, such as maintaining our corporate headquarters, public company costs, implementation of the Enterprise Resource Planning system, audit and other fees for professional services and legal compliance; Business development expenses of US$3.4 million (2024: US$3.6 million) which is attributable to costs of our customer engagement expenses, our investor relations expenses, including costs for press releases, maintenance of the Company’s website, our other investor marketing and information initiatives, and other fees for corporate advisory services; Non-cash share-based payment expense of US$9.6 million (2024: US$3.8 million) which is attributable to expensing the value of unlisted options and performance rights granted to key employees, consultants and advisors, as required under AASB 2 Share-based Payment. The value is measured at grant date and recognized over the vesting period of the incentive securities; and Finance income of US$3.6 million (2024: US$0.5 million) attributable to interest income on cash balances and foreign exchange gains. Loss Per Share The basic and diluted loss per share for the year ended June 30, 2025, was US$0.12 per share (2024: US$0.10 per share). Dividends No dividends were paid or declared since the start of the financial year (2024: nil). No recommendation for payment of dividends has been made. 38

Directors’ Report continued Financial Position At June 30, 2025, the Group had cash reserves of US$54.8 million (2024: US$33.2 million) and net assets of US$92.4 million (2024: US$51.3 million). The financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis, which contemplates the continuity of normal business activity and the realization of assets and the settlement of liabilities in the normal course of business. Based on management’s assessment of the Company’s financial position, cash flows, and future projections, management has concluded that there are no conditions or events that raise material uncertainty about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern for the foreseeable future, which is defined as at least twelve months from the date of issuance of the financial statements. Business Strategies and Prospects for Future Financial Years The objective of the Group is to create long-term shareholder value by combining its patented titanium technologies to continue to scale a low-cost titanium supply chain business in the U.S. and, in time, globally. After completing industrial pilot scale production of titanium metal using 100% recycled titanium feedstocks in Utah IperionX has now transitioned to be a commercial producer of titanium metal products in the United States, based on the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. IperionX produces low-cost and high-quality angular and spherical titanium powder, which is used to produce near-net-shape and final titanium parts through powder metallurgy or additive manufacturing. These technologies provide IperionX with a sustainable competitive advantage and significant value uplift from upgrading raw titanium materials through to finished high-performance titanium products when compared to traditional titanium industry supply chains. To achieve its objective, the Group currently has the following business strategies and prospects over the medium to long-term: commercialize the Technologies to produce titanium metal and metal powders for key markets, including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, bicycles, additive manufacturing, hydrogen and automotive; complete techno-economic evaluations, including working with current and potential customers to provide titanium metal powder samples and prototype titanium components produced with our titanium metal powder using the Technologies; continue to investigate alternative applications of the Technologies to additional value-added metal closed-loop production capabilities, including zircon and synthetic rutile, and the potential production of rare earth elements; continue discussions with current and potential customers and strategic partners for future production and sale of titanium metal products, titanium minerals and other critical minerals, including, but not limited to, rare earth elements; continue to expand IperionX’s critical mineral land position in the United States, explore for additional critical minerals and secure final permit and zoning approvals; complete the Feasibility Study on the Titan Project to assess the economic potential of the Project and define an initial Ore Reserve; and vertically integrate the Technologies with titanium material feedstocks from the Titan Project to develop an end-to-end U.S.-based titanium and critical mineral supply chain. Directors’ Report 39

Directors’ Report continued Operating and Financial Review continued Business Strategies and Prospects for Future Financial Years continued These activities are inherently risky and the Board is unable to provide certainty of the expected results of these activities, or that any or all of these likely developments will be achieved. The material business risks faced by the Group that could have an effect on the Group’s future prospects, and how the Group manages these risks, include: Mineral development risk – The exploration for, and development of, mineral deposits involves a high degree of risk. Few properties that are explored are ultimately developed into producing mines. To mitigate this risk, the Company will undertake systematic and staged exploration and testing programs on its mineral properties and, subject to the results of these exploration programs, the Company will then progressively undertake a number of technical and economic studies with respect to its projects prior to making a decision to mine. However there can be no guarantee that the studies will confirm the technical and economic viability of the Company’s mineral properties or that the properties will be successfully brought into production; Capital and funding risk – Future expansion of the Company’s titanium facilities and any future development of the Company’s mineral properties will require substantial additional financing. Failure to obtain sufficient additional financing may result in delay or postponement of further development of the Company’s titanium facilities and/or mineral properties or even a loss of property interest. There can be no assurance that additional capital or other types of financing will be available if needed or that, if available, the terms of such financing will be favorable to the Company; Commodity price risk – The price of titanium metal and other critical minerals, including titanium feedstocks, rare earth elements, silica sand and zircon fluctuate widely and are affected by numerous factors beyond the control of the Group. Future production from the Group’s titanium metal facilities or mineral properties will be affected by commodity prices being adequate to make these facilities or properties economic. The Group currently does not engage in any hedging or derivative transactions to manage commodity price risk. As the Group’s operations change, this policy will be reviewed periodically going forward; and Competition risk – The Group competes with other domestic and international companies in the titanium technology and critical minerals industries, some of whom have larger financial and operating resources. Increased competition could lead to higher supply or lower overall pricing. There can be no assurance that the Company will not be materially affected by increased competition. In addition, while the Group is continuing to secure additional surface and mineral rights, there can be no guarantee that the Group will succeed in these efforts, which could affect the results of the Group’s operations. Significant Changes in the State of Affairs On July 7, 2024, the Company completed the second and final tranche of a placement of 26.2 million new fully paid ordinary shares at an issue price of A$1.91 per share to raise gross proceeds of US$33.4 million (A$50.0 million) before costs. The second tranche consisted of 0.4 million shares with proceeds of US$4.8 million (A$7.1 million) placed to institutional, sophisticated and professional investors and 3.3 million shares to Directors of the Company following shareholder approval. On November 26, 2024, the Group exercised its exclusive option to purchase intellectual property rights of Blacksand. The Group now holds the exclusive commercial licensing rights for more than 40 global patents through a license agreement with the University of Utah including the global patents for patented technologies that can produce low-cost and low-carbon titanium metal. As consideration for the option, the Group has made or will make payments totaling US$14.3 million (of which US$5.5 million was paid in prior fiscal periods); 40

Directors’ Report continued On December 18, 2024, the Company completed the final tranche of its placement of 31.25 million new fully paid ordinary shares at an issue price of A$3.20 per share to raise gross proceeds of US$66 million (approximately A$100.0 million); On February 17, 2025, the Group was awarded up to US$47.1 million in funding by the U.S. DoW through the IBAS program to accelerate development of a resilient, low-cost, and fully-integrated U.S. mineral-to-metal titanium supply chain, which includes US$5 million to go towards the completion of a Definitive Feasibility Study for the Titan Project.; and On June 5, 2025, IperionX received an SBIR Phase III Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity contract to achieve “Low-Cost Domestic Titanium for Defense Applications” in the U.S., enabling the Company to receive task order funding from U.S. DoW agencies up to a total of US$99 million. On June 11, 2025, IperionX announced that it has received the first task order, valued at US$1.3 million, from the U.S. Army under this SBIR contract. Other than the above, there were no significant changes in the state of affairs of the Group during the year ended June 30, 2025, not otherwise disclosed. Significant Events After the Balance Date On July 29, 2025, the Company completed the first tranche of a placement of 14.0 million new fully paid ordinary shares at A$5.00 per share, to raise gross proceeds of A$70.0 million (approximately US$45.7 million) before costs. The first tranche consisted of 13.6 million shares to institutional and sophisticated investors to raise gross proceeds of A$67.8 million (~US$44.3 million) before costs. The second and final tranche consists of 0.4 million shares to Directors of the Company, subject to shareholder approval, to raise gross proceeds of A$2.2 million (~ US$1.4 million) before costs. The placement positioned the company to capitalize on the United States’ demand for a reliable source of titanium metal – particularly for defense, aerospace and advanced manufacturing applications. Ordering long-lead capital items at that time was expected to shorten the construction schedule for planned scale-up in titanium production capacity and underpinned ongoing engagement with the U.S. DoW; On August 26, 2025, the Company announced that the U.S. DoW had obligated US$12.5 million under IperionX’s previously announced US$47 million award to strengthen the U.S. Defense Industrial Base by accelerating the scale-up of a resilient, low-cost, and fully-integrated U.S. mineral-to-metal titanium supply chain. The US$12.5 million was applied to purchase orders for long-lead, major capital equipment required for the next stage of capacity scale-up to over 1,400 metric tons per year at the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus; and On September 26, 2025, the Company announced that the DoW obligated an additional US$25.0 million to the previously announced US$47.1 million award. This US$25.0 million obligation, along with the prior US$12.5 million and US$5.0 million, takes total obligations to US$42.5 million, with the remaining US$4.6 million expected to be obligated over the contract term. Other than the above, as at the date of this report there are no matters or circumstances that have arisen since June 30, 2025 that have significantly affected or may significantly affect: the operations, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group; the results of those operations, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group; or the state of affairs, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group. Directors’ Report 41

Directors’ Report continued Todd Hannigan 25,443,775 1,260,000 560,000 – 918,906 613,797 Anastasios Arima 11,405,113 2,250,000 1,000,000 – 1,307,418 1,057,243 Lorraine Martin 963,144 – – 106,093 – 145,371 Vaughn Taylor 1,024,171 – – – – 145,371 Tony Tripeny – – – – – 42,486 Melissa Waller 403,032 – – – – 145,371 Beverly Wyse 504,489 – – 106,093 – 145,371 Ordinary shares1 Indemnification and Insurance of Officers and Auditors The Constitution of the Company requires the Company, to the extent permitted by law, to indemnify any person who is or has been a director or officer of the Company or Group for any liability caused by such a director or officer and any legal costs incurred by a director or officer in defending an action for any liability caused by such a director or officer. During or since the end of the financial year, no amounts have been paid by the Company or Group in relation to the above indemnities. During the financial year, an insurance premium of US$229,238 was paid by the Group to insure against a liability incurred by a person who is or has been a director or officer of the Company or Group. The Company has agreed to indemnify its auditors, PricewaterhouseCoopers, to the extent permitted by law, against any claim by a third party arising from the Company’s breach of their agreement. The indemnity stipulates that the Company will meet the full amount of any such liabilities including a reasonable amount of legal costs. Directors’ Interests As at the date of this report, the Directors’ interests in the securities of the Company are as follows: Vendor performance shares2 Vendor options3 Unlisted options4 Performance rights5 Restricted stock units6 Notes: ‘Ordinary Shares’ means fully paid ordinary shares in the capital of the Company. ‘Vendor Performance Shares’ means an unlisted performance share that converts to one Ordinary Share in the capital of the Company upon the satisfaction of the relevant performance condition. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021. ‘Vendor Options’ means an unlisted option to subscribe for one Ordinary Share in the capital of the Company. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021. ‘Unlisted Options’ means an unlisted option to subscribe for one Ordinary Share in the capital of the Company. ‘Performance Rights’ means an unlisted performance right that converts to one Ordinary Share in the capital of the Company upon the satisfaction of the relevant performance condition. ‘Restricted Stock Units’ means an unlisted restricted stock unit that converts to one Ordinary Share in the capital of the Company upon the satisfaction of the relevant service vesting condition. 42

Directors’ Report continued Convertible Securities At the date of this report the following convertible securities have been issued over unissued Ordinary Shares of the Company: 19,800,000 vendor Class B performance shares that vest upon achieving the First Production Milestone on or before September 17, 2025, expiring December 1, 2025. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021; 4,000,000 vendor Class A performance options exercisable at A$0.20 each that vest upon achieving the Pre-Feasibility Study Milestone on or before September 17, 2024, expiring December 1, 2025. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021; 4,000,000 vendor Class B performance options exercisable at A$0.20 each that vest upon achieving the First Production Milestone on or before September 17, 2024, expiring December 1, 2025. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021; 225,000 vendor options exercisable at A$0.20 each on or before December 1, 2025. These were issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021; 212,186 director options exercisable at A$0.87 each on or before December 5, 2026; 1,305,000 employee options exercisable at A$8.00 each on or before June 30, 2027; 1,374,746 employee options exercisable at A$5.00 each on or before April 10, 2029; 4,957,558 director and employee RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions (1,163,002 expiring December 31, 2025, 141,456 expiring December 5, 2026, 1,162,996 expiring December 31, 2026, 270,084 expiring December 5, 2027, 25,132 expiring December 31, 2027, 212,430 expiring December 16, 2028, 344,483 expiring December 31, 2028, and 1,637,975 expiring April 10, 2029); 3,775,000 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$4.00 per share and other various (non-market based) performance conditions (445,000 expiring December 31, 2027 and 3,330,000 expiring December 31, 2028); 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$6.00 per share, expiring April 10, 2031; 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$7.00 per share, expiring April 10, 2031; 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$8.00 per share, expiring April 10, 2031; and 1,161,000 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving various (non-market based) performance conditions (271,000 expiring December 22, 2025, 160,000 expiring December 31, 2025, 400,000 expiring April 23, 2026, 275,000 expiring December 22, 2026, and 55,000 expiring December 31, 2026). During the year ended June 30, 2025 and up to the date of this report, 29,154,227 ordinary shares have been issued as a result of the exercise of Performance Shares, Unlisted Options, RSUs, and Performance Rights. Directors’ Report 43

Directors’ Report continued Letter from Chair of the Remuneration and Nomination Committee Dear Shareholders, On behalf of the Board of Directors of the Company, I am pleased to present the IperionX’s Remuneration Report for the financial year ended June 30, 2025. The Board of Directors of the Company has overall accountability for the oversight of the Company’s remuneration approach for executive KMP and NEDs, having regard to the recommendations made by the Compensation Committee. Who we are and where we operate IperionX is a U.S.-based titanium metal technology business with an award-winning, patented technology portfolio. While we are listed on both the ASX and Nasdaq, our business is unequivocally American: the vast majority of our executives and employees, our customers, and our operating assets are in the United States, supporting the rapid build-out of a domestic titanium supply chain. Our pay philosophy Executing this strategy requires world-class U.S. leadership and a high-performance culture tightly aligned to long-term shareholder value. The Board is accountable for remuneration outcomes for executive KMP and NEDs, informed by recommendations from the Compensation Committee and independent advice from Pearl Meyer & Partners (U.S.). Our approach is simple and consistent:. Pay for performance: Rewards should rise or fall with value creation; Role scope and criticality: Compensation reflects the responsibility and impact of the role; and Operate where we compete: Benchmark to the U.S. market in which we hire, produce, and sell. Why U.S. benchmarking is essential As one of the few truly U.S. companies on the ASX, competing for specialized manufacturing and deep-tech leadership talent requires U.S. market calibration. This is a deliberate and necessary consequence of our strategy and footprint. Paying below competitive U.S. rates risks execution, schedule, retention and value leakage; paying appropriately attracts and retains the high-performance talent needed to build a leading American titanium business. Engagement and disclosure We actively engaged throughout the year with shareholders and proxy advisers to explain the realities of competing for U.S. leadership talent while being perceived as “Australian” only due to our primary ASX listing. Feedback from many of our largest long-term shareholders – both U.S. and Australian – has been supportive of our U.S.-centric framework. We also received constructive input on disclosure, which we have reflected in this year’s report to further clarify targets, calibration, and outcomes. It was pleasing to hear directly from many of our largest U.S. and Australian long-term shareholders who are very supportive of our remuneration framework. These shareholders recognize the need for a U.S. remuneration framework to attract, motivate, and retain the best engineering, research and leadership talent to ensure the long-term success of IperionX. We were also pleased to receive positive feedback from both shareholders and proxy advisors on our uplifted disclosures. In the order of full transparency, we have provided a summary of key feedback received and our responses. 44

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration benchmarking Our approach to pay at IperionX is anchored in three principles that apply to everyone – from new hires to the Board: performance, the scope and criticality of the role, and location. These principles guided the recent independent review of executive remuneration by Pearl Meyer & Partners. Benchmarking our CEO and senior executives against a sub-US$2 billion peer group showed total packages at roughly the 10th-25th percentile at the time of review. Following this, the Board repositioned compensation to approximately the 25th percentile for Cash Compensation (fixed remuneration + STI) and around the median for Total Compensation (including equity). Importantly, ≥80% of the CEO’s and Executive Chair’s total opportunity is performance-based and linked to share-price outcomes, keeping fixed pay lean and aligning upside with shareholders. The alignment between this framework and shareholder value creation is evident. In FY2025 our share price rose ~133% from A$2.04 to A$4.75 per share, and momentum continued into the September 2025 quarter, reaching a high of A$7.60. Market quality also improved, with liquidity increasing significantly following inclusion in the ASX 300 during FY2025 and the ASX 200 in August 2025. Looking ahead Our commitment is unchanged: maintain a clear, performance-linked remuneration framework that supports safe, reliable scale-up; attracts and retains mission-critical U.S. talent; and aligns leaders with the long-term interests of all shareholders. Where we receive informed, constructive feedback, we will continue to listen and improve – without compromising the capabilities required to deliver our strategy. Vaughn Taylor Chair, Compensation Committee Directors’ Report 45

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report This Remuneration Report, which forms part of the Directors’ Report, sets out information about the remuneration of the KMP of the Group. The Remuneration Report has been audited as required by section 308 (3C) of the Corporations Act 2001. Details of Key Management Personnel The KMP of the Group during or since the end of the financial year were as follows: Directors Executive Chairman Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director Lead Independent Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Independent Non-Executive Director Mr. Todd W. Hannigan Mr. Anastasios Arima Ms. Lorraine M. Martin Mr. Vaughn Taylor Ms. Melissa G. Waller Ms. Beverly M. Wyse Mr. Tony Tripeny Other KMP Mr. Toby E. Symonds Mr. W. Scott Sparks Mr. Dominic P. Allen Ms. Marcela Castro President and Chief Strategy Officer Chief Operating Officer Chief Commercial Officer Chief Financial Officer Unless otherwise disclosed, the KMP held their position from July 1, 2024, until the date of this report. Executive Remuneration Snapshot Overview of Fiscal 2025 Executive Remuneration Framework Executive remuneration arrangements for fiscal 2025 have been designed to: Benchmark to where we operate: Reflect the Company’s U.S. business, workforce, customer base, and asset footprint. Align interests with shareholders: Emphasize pay-for-performance with clear links to long-term value creation. Support commitment and stability: Promote sustained leadership focus and continuity through multi-year incentive design. Prioritize execution and resilience: Tie outcomes to commercialization milestones, scale-up delivery, balance-sheet strength and long-term value creation. 46

Directors’ Report continued Fiscal 2025 Company Performance Overview Fiscal 2025 Operational Performance Highlights The following Remuneration Report for fiscal 2025 sets out the remuneration framework for the Company’s executive KMP and NEDs. For fiscal 2025, the remuneration framework was heavily weighted towards rewarding executive KMP for progressing the commercialization of our assets and balance sheet strength, delivering significant appreciation in the company share price and focusing on delivery of key scale-up targets. The Compensation Committee is pleased to report that throughout fiscal 2025 the Company achieved the following key milestones: Funding, Corporate, Financial and Investor Relations – Raised US$67 million in equity adding eight new institutional shareholders to the register. An exceptional +133% increase in the share price over the period from A$2.04 to A$4.75 per share. Inclusion in the ASX300 Index significantly increased share liquidity; Operations – The 1080 Building was transformed into near finished industrial titanium production hub over the year. The 1092 Building was transformed into the Advanced Manufacturing Center, and made significant progress on the Titan Project towards DFS and position for future development; Commercial and Government Engagements – Significant progress above expectation on publicly announced and confidential commercial engagements and government contracts, including funding programs and other confidential engagements; Product Innovation/R&D/IP – Confidential ongoing innovation and protection of existing IP. Completed full acquisition of the ‘Titanium Technologies’ from Blacksand in November – securing IP critical for commercialization and long-term success; Safety – no lost time injuries during the period. Designed and implemented robust engineering systems to ensure workplace safety; and People & Sustainability – Recruited more top talent across the business and obtained revalidation by UL for 100% recycled content for powder production in SLC, Utah. During fiscal 2025, short-term and long-term incentives were awarded to executive KMP and restricted stock units were awarded to NED’s. Fiscal 2025 Market Performance Highlights The table below outlines the Company’s market performance since July 20, 2020. Dividends paid (US$) Share price at end of period (A$) (ASX:IPX) 1-year total shareholder return (%) 3-year total shareholder return (%) Market capitalization at end of period (A$) – A$4.75 133% 479% A$1.5 billion – – – – A$2.04 A$1.115 A$0.82 A$0.96 83% 36% (15%) 269%1 113% 329% N/A N/A A$525 million A$216 million A$115 million A$101 million Fiscal 2025 Fiscal 2024 Fiscal 2023 Fiscal July 20, 2020 2022 to June 30, 2021 Notes: 1. Calculated using a starting share price of A$0.26, being the closing share price of the Company on ASX on December 1, 2020, which was the date of completion of the reverse acquisition of the Company by HMAPL. Directors’ Report 47

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Framework Overview IperionX is a U.S.-based titanium technology and manufacturing company listed on both the ASX and Nasdaq. Our executives, employees, customers, and operating assets are overwhelmingly in the United States, and our strategy is anchored in building a low-cost and resilient U.S. titanium supply chain. The Remuneration Framework for KMP is developed by the Board and its Compensation Committee, with independent advice from Pearl Meyer (U.S.). It is designed to: Compete for U.S. leadership talent in advanced manufacturing and hard-tech; Align rewards to long-term shareholder value, strategic execution, and long-term success; Reinforce multi-year commitment to scaling operations safely, reliably and profitably; and Drive performance while managing risk, particularly during rapid commercial scale-up. Our structure combines fixed remuneration with a meaningful “at-risk” component across short – and long-term incentives. Deliberately lower fixed pay and a higher proportion of performance-based long-term equity ensure executive outcomes closely mirror shareholder outcomes. A significant share of total compensation is contingent on achieving clearly defined milestones tied to value creation. The table below provides an overview of the remuneration elements for fiscal year 2025. Remuneration Report continued Fiscal 2025 Company Performance Overview continued Fiscal 2025 Market Performance Highlights continued 48

Directors’ Report continued Why our remuneration is benchmarked to the United States IperionX is a founder-led, U.S.-based titanium metal technology and manufacturing company with a valuable, award-winning patented technology portfolio. When we listed via a reverse takeover in 2020, we started with an early-stage mineral exploration asset in Tennessee, no proprietary technology, a market capitalization of less than A$10 million (share price ~A$0.10), and less than A$2 million in cash. From these modest beginnings – and with the crucial support of our long-term shareholders – we have built an emerging leader in the U.S. titanium industry. Today, by every operational and strategic measure, IperionX is a U.S. enterprise: People and Leadership: Over 95% of our employees and the majority of our Board of Directors are U.S. citizens; Operations: All operating assets – from our Virginia Titanium Campus, R&D centers in Utah and Virginia, to our Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee – are located in the United States; Customers and Suppliers: More than 90% of our customers and suppliers are U.S.-based, reflecting our strategic domestic supply chain focus; Capital Markets: Dual-listed on Nasdaq and ASX, with over 40% of our non-employee shareholders are U.S. domiciled; and National Strategic Role: The U.S. Government has committed ~US$160 million in non-dilutive funding to accelerate the re-shoring of a domestic titanium supply chain. Beyond being our largest non-equity financier, the U.S. government is poised to become a major customer. Given this footprint, the U.S. market is the appropriate reference point for recruiting, rewarding, and retaining the specialized leadership required to execute our growth strategy. Benchmarking to the U.S. ensures competitiveness for scarce talent, reinforces pay-for-performance, and aligns incentives with the markets, customers, and regulators most critical to IperionX’s long-term success. Remuneration Mix Executive remuneration includes fixed remuneration and performance-based remuneration (STI’s and LTI’s). The remuneration framework for fiscal 2025 comprised the following elements: approved by the Board. Fixed Remuneration Short-Term Incentive (STI) Long-Term Incentive (LTI) Purpose Recognized the Drives the achievement Encourages sustained long-term requirements and of annual operational business growth and shareholder value. responsibilities of the role. objectives. Target Opportunity Not applicable Varies for each KMP Varies for each KMP (% of fixed remuneration) Target Opportunity 25th percentile 25th percentile Median compared to Peer Group Delivery mechanism Cash Cash Equity in the form of Performance Rights, Unlisted Options, and RSUs. Performance criteria None Given the growth stage of Hurdles – “out-of-the-money” share the business, the Company price hurdles for Performance Rights uses milestone based KPI’s and Options tied to significant aligned to the strategic plan shareholder value creation; and Service Period – 3-5 year service period requirements for Performance Rights and RSU’s. Timeframe before reward is realized Immediate 1 year Subject to the achievement of performance and service conditions, over a period up to five years. Directors’ Report 49

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Remuneration Mix continued To attract and retain executive talent with the skills and experience to deliver the Company’s strategy additional forms of remuneration including sign-on incentives, and other one-off incentives may be provided to executive KMP at the Board’s discretion. Shareholder and Proxy Feedback Over the past 12 months, the Chairman of the Compensation Committee, Mr. Vaughn Taylor, has engaged with a significant proportion of our shareholders. Throughout the year, the Company also engaged shareholders on a wide range of topics, including executive compensation, corporate governance, and environmental and social issues. This ongoing engagement gives us valuable insight into shareholders’ perspectives and guides enhancements to our governance and disclosures. By actively addressing shareholder questions and concerns, we ensure that the matters most important to our investors remain at the forefront of our decision-making and strategic priorities. It was pleasing to hear directly from many of our largest U.S. and Australian active long-term shareholders who are very supportive of our remuneration framework and that they recognize the need for a U.S. remuneration framework. We were also pleased to receive positive feedback from both shareholders and proxy advisors on our uplifted disclosures. In the order of full transparency, we have provided key feedback received and our responses below. Proxy Advisor Feedback Response Given the Company is listed on the ASX as its primary listing, compensation structures and the remuneration framework should be based on Australian standard, not U.S. standard. We value ASX standards; however, our remuneration framework is intentionally aligned with U.S. practices in light of our strategic focus on increased manufacturing investments, strong market fundamentals in the U.S. titanium sector, and our technology-driven business model. As we continue to expand our American operations and innovate in advanced titanium production, attracting and retaining top U.S. talent is critical to the long-term success of our business. By tailoring our compensation structure to the U.S. market, we are better positioned to drive long-term shareholder value and ensure the operational and commercial success of our titanium technologies. Fixed remuneration pay reviews of more than 15% are substantial and should be limited. Fixed remuneration continues to grow at above average levels from a low base. The market capitalization of the company has grown significantly over the last few years, which has resulted in a new peer group being selected by Pearl Meyer, which has also resulted in an increase in fixed remuneration levels. As the Company continues to grow in complexity moving into commercialization phase and also continued growth in market capitalization, we expect to see growth in fixed remuneration above market averages. You have a 30 June fiscal year end, however your remuneration measurement period is based on 31 December calendar year. You should align these. While our primary listing is on the ASX, we operate to calendar year with regards to our business plan, budgeting and targets, which is standard for a U.S. operating company. Rather than incurring the unnecessary financial expense of varying our financial year for audited financial statements, especially now that we have to comply with the Sarbanes Oxley Act in the U.S., we will ultimately make a decision to align the two around a potential redomicile event in the future. We are used to STIP targets should that are tied to quantitative financial targets (revenue, earnings, margins etc) and quantitative operational targets (production rates, etc). The board believes that the current approach to STIP measurements is the best approach given the growth and scale up stage of the business. We are not yet at the stage of implementing such STIP financial and operational targets. However, we envisage our STIP targets will shift to these financial and operational metrics over time as the business moves into steady state production. Provide more information on the peer group comparisons that influence KMP compensation reviews. Following this feedback, we have included the Peer Group in this years remuneration report. 50

Directors’ Report continued Proxy Advisor Feedback Response Preference for KMP performance based incentives to be a number of measures, not just share price, with a preference of >50% of LTIP being performance based. Historically, more than 50% of LTIPs on issue have been performance-based. Following the recent remuneration and benchmarking review by Pearl Meyer, the new company LTIP plan has been aligned to long-term value creation with a higher weighting on performance linked equity versus time-based equity. For KMP, performance-based incentives now comprise more than 50% and, in some cases, more than 80% for the CEO, President and Executive Chairman. Further, these LTIP awards are issued with share price targets or exercise price targets that are significantly “out of the money” at the time of issuance. LTIP issuances also have a minimum 3-year service period, in some cases 5-years, before the equity vests and/or accessible by the KMP. LTIP granted to KMP should have a minimum three-year cliff vesting profile, not annual vesting. This has been incorporated into the new LTIP plan designed by Pearl Meyer. Performance Shares have a five-year service period requirement and RSU’s have a three-year service period requirement. No annual vesting. To remove potential risk of conflict, any equity grants for NED should have a vesting profile of no longer than one (1) year, and if the NED resigns, there should be a pro-rata allocation up to the date of resignation. This has been incorporated into the new LTIP plan designed by Pearl Meyer. Remuneration Benchmarking Overview From late 2024 to April 2025, the Compensation Committee engaged Pearl Meyer, a U.S.-based independent remuneration consultant, to review IperionX’s remuneration structure, policy, and strategy for executives and employees. This review was prompted by the Company’s significant growth since the last benchmarking exercise and by stakeholder feedback on previous Remuneration Reports. Looking ahead, the Company intends to review its peer group annually. Pearl Meyer benchmarked IperionX against comparable U.S. businesses, reflecting IperionX’s position as a U.S.-based technology and metals manufacturing company rather than a ASX resource company. The resulting framework emphasizes: Retaining key employees and attracting skilled talent to advance disruptive titanium technologies within the realities of competing in a highly competitive U.S. market. Aligning executive compensation with complex development and commercial initiatives over multi-year horizons to create long-term shareholder returns. Key characteristics of the 15 selected U.S. peers include: Industry – Vertically integrated metals, specialty chemicals, 3D printing, and manufacturing technology companies, mirroring IperionX’s business model. Stage – A mix of both operating and developing companies, encompassing pre-revenue/profit and post-revenue/ profit organizations. When analyzing benchmarking data, Pearl Meyer considered: Size and Complexity – The peer group includes companies of varying maturity levels and revenue and cash flow profiles, which can create compensation differences. To address this, data was segmented at a US$2 billion enterprise value threshold as a proxy for the stage of the business cycle. Role Comparison – Individual roles at IperionX were assessed to ensure like-for-like benchmarking with comparable positions in the peer group. Directors’ Report 51

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued 2025 Peer Group The table below is the selected group of peers for the 2024/2025 remuneration review that has informed the Fixed Remuneration, STI Targets and LTI allocations for fiscal year 2025. Market Cap (US$) TSR as of 2/1/25 Company GICS Industry Headquarters @ 2/1/25 1-Yr 3-Yr 5-Yr Tronox Holdings plc Commodity Chemicals Stamford, CT $1,622 –24% –21% 7% Kaiser Aluminum Corporation Aluminum Franklin, TN $1,116 11% –6% –3% Minerals Technologies Inc. Specialty Chemicals New York, NY $2,446 13% 3% 8% Century Aluminum Company Aluminum Chicago, IL $1,696 67% 5% 28% Materion Corporation Diversified Metals and Mining Mayfield Heights, OH $2,096 –16% 7% 14% Metallus Inc. Steel Canton, OH $635 –28% 0% 19% Compass Minerals International, Inc. Diversified Metals and Mining Overland Park, KS $483 –49% –40% –26% Proto Labs, Inc. Industrial Machinery and Supplies Maple Plain, MN $1,023 13% –5% –17% 3D Systems Corporation Industrial Machinery and Supplies Rock Hill, SC $488 –25% –42% –20% Luxfer Holdings PLC Industrial Machinery and Supplies Milwaukee, WI $379 81% –1% 1% Piedmont Lithium Inc. Diversified Metals and Mining Belmont, NC $285 –42% –43% 2% Energy Fuels Inc. Coal and Consumable Fuels Lakewood, CO $1,508 –32% –6% 30% Origin Materials, Inc. Commodity Chemicals West Sacramento, CA $134 76% –43% n/a Solid Power, Inc. Automotive Parts and Equipment Louisville, CO $251 –18% –40% n/a TMC the metals company Inc. Diversified Metals and Mining Vancouver, BC $557 26% 4% n/a 75th Percentile $1,565 20% 2% 15% Median $635 –16% –6% 4% 25th Percentile $431 –26% –40% –7% Converted to USD* IperionX Limited South Boston, VA $829 132% 68% 109% Percentile Rank 54% Highest Highest Highest In AUD IperionX Limited A$1,336 132% 68% 109% Beyond the selected peer group, survey data was also evaluated. Where both peer group and survey data were available, a weighted average was used to determine competitive market rates, assigning greater weight to proxy compensation data for KMP. 52

Directors’ Report continued At this stage, the large U.S. titanium and advanced metal manufacturers – including Howmet Aerospace, Carpenter Technology, and ATI – were not included in the peer group. While these companies produce a range of titanium products for similar end markets and represent potential competitors for executive and managerial talent, their larger size, valuation, and complexity currently set them apart for benchmarking. However, they remain prospective peers for future benchmarking reviews as IperionX grows. Benchmarking Outcomes The benchmarking review revealed that total remuneration – encompassing fixed remuneration and both STI and LTI awards – for KMP was below the 25th percentile of the sub-$2 billion enterprise value peer group. This gap was even more pronounced when the entire peer group was considered. To ensure that IperionX can effectively attract, retain, and motivate high-caliber Executive KMP, the Board and the Remuneration and Nomination Committee have approved a revised executive remuneration framework for 2025, which includes: Target Total Cash Compensation: Positioned near the 25th percentile of the peer group. Target Total Compensation: Positioned near the median of the peer group. Remuneration Mix Weightings: Weighted more heavily toward “at-risk” components that reflect both immediate priorities and longer-term strategic objectives. In determining the remuneration mix, the Company places greater emphasis on long-term incentives, aligned with the extended timelines required to achieve its strategic goals, retaining talent and deliver sustained shareholder value. Under this updated framework, the Compensation Committee and Board approved the following compensation packages for KMP during fiscal year 2025, effective 1 January 2025. 2025 315,000 158,000 50% 473,000 630,000 1,103,000 71% 2024 250,000 125,000 50% 375,000 250,000 625,000 60% Scott Sparks (Chief Operating Officer) 2025 315,000 158,000 50% 473,000 630,000 1,103,000 71% 2024 250,000 125,000 50% 375,000 250,000 625,000 60% Marcela Castro (Chief Financial Officer) 2025 290,000 145,000 50% 435,000 290,000 725,000 60% 2024 250,000 125,000 50% 375,000 250,000 625,000 60% Total Target target cash total % STIP compensa- Target compensa- Perfor- Base Target STIP target tion LTIP tion mance (US$) (US$) % (US$) (US$) (US$) related 70% 84% 935,000 2,465,000 3,400,000 640,000 1,000,000 1,640,000 60% 76% 70% 84% 889,000 2,351,250 3,240,250 608,000 950,000 1,558,000 60% 76% 70% 84% 655,000 1,732,500 2,387,500 375,000 250,000 625,000 Taso Arima (Chief Executive Officer and Managing Director) 2025 550,000 385,000 2024 400,000 240,000 Toby Symonds 2025 523,000 366,000 2024 380,000 228,000 Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman) 2025 385,000 270,000 2024 250,000 125,000 Dominic Allen (Chief Commercial Officer) 50% 60% Directors’ Report 53

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Benchmarking Outcomes continued A key focus of the Compensation Committee during fiscal 2026 will be further enhancing the executive remuneration framework and updating benchmarking against a group of companies of comparable size and complexity to IperionX to ensure the market competitiveness of IperionX’s remuneration arrangements. Over time and subject to progression of the Company towards revenue generation and profitability, to ensure the Company continues to attract and retain top-tier global talent, it is the intention to adjust Executive KMP to the 60th to 75th percentile on a Total Compensation basis compared to peer comparator groups. Executive Remuneration The Group’s executive remuneration policy is to provide a fixed remuneration component and a performance-based component (STI’s and LTI’s). The Board believes that this remuneration policy is appropriate given the considerations discussed in the section above and is appropriate in aligning executives’ objectives with shareholder and business objectives. In a significant year for IperionX, executive KMP demonstrated strong performance, and their remuneration outcomes reflect their performance and significant contributions in fiscal 2025. Fixed Remuneration Fixed remuneration consists of base salaries, as well as employer 401(k) contributions or contributions to superannuation funds and other non-cash benefits. Non-cash benefits may include provision of motor vehicles, rental allowance, health care benefits, health insurance, and life insurance. Fixed remuneration is reviewed annually by the Board. The process consists of a review of company and individual performance, relevant comparative remuneration externally and internally and, where appropriate, external advice on policies and practices. As outlined above, as part of the implementation of the Remuneration Benchmarking Review completed by Pearl Meyer, during the fiscal year, the fixed remuneration of Executive KMP was benchmarked to peer comparator groups and adjusted to the 25th percentile, with the following adjustments made for executive KMP fixed remuneration during the fiscal year. Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman) 250,000 317,500 67,500 27% Anastasios Arima (CEO) 400,000 475,000 75,000 19% Toby Symonds (President) 380,000 451,500 71,500 19% W. Scott Sparks (COO) 250,000 282,500 32,500 13% Dominic Allen (CCO) 250,000 282,500 32,500 13% Marcela Castro (CFO) 250,000 270,000 20,000 8% Executive KMP Previous (US$) Current (US$) Increase (US$) Increase (%) 54

Directors’ Report continued Performance Based Remuneration – Short-Term Incentive Some executive KMP are entitled to an annual cash bonus upon achieving various KPI’s, as set by the Board. Having regard to the current size, nature and opportunities of the Group, the Board has determined that these KPI’s will include measures related to successful completion of activities as outlined in the below table. Prior to the end of each financial year, the Board assesses performance against these criteria. The following table sets out the key criteria which were set by the Board and used to determine executive STI outcomes paid during the fiscal year 2025. Feature Description Eligibility Limited to select employees, as determined by the Board. Opportunity The target opportunity as a percentage of fixed remuneration is set out below: Executive KMP Target STI (% of FR) Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman) 50% Anastasios Arima (CEO) 60% Toby Symonds (President) 60% W. Scott Sparks (COO) 50% Dominic Allen (CCO) 50% Marcela Castro (CFO) 50% Measure Measure Weighting Safety Managing the health and safety matters as a critical business activity 15% People & Sustainability Recruitment and retention of key talent across the business, managing environmental compliance and promoting sustainable development 15% Product Innovation/R&D/IP Ongoing innovation and protection of existing IP 15% Commercial and Government Engagements Focus on delivering numerous commercial and government contracts 15% Operations Focus on delivery of key scale-up targets 15% Funding, Corporate, Financial and Investor Relations Focus on delivery and commercialization of our assets and balance sheet strength 25% Weighted scorecard achievement Payout % of target STIP Threshold 0%-50% –% Target 75% 100% Maximum 100% 200% Payout Methodology The total payout is calculated based on incremental objectives completed. To receive a payout, the total completion percentage must exceed 50% and is capped at 200% of target. The relationship between weighted score card achievement and payout is reflected in the chart below. Performance Assessment IperionX utilizes a weighted scorecard methodology to award annual cash bonuses to executive KMP, which enhances transparency on the determination of annual cash bonuses. This approach links short-term incentives for executive KMP to clearly defined Company objectives to create a performance-based compensation opportunity that furthers stockholders’ interests while motivating and challenging our executive talent to achieve strategic priorities. The cash bonus scorecard for the STIP paid in fiscal year 2025 comprises of six primary strategic goals, each weighted between 15-25%. Each of these goals contained a number of defined objectives. As part of the methodology, scorecard completion determines the total payout. Payment The STI awards were paid in cash after the completion of reviews at December 31, 2024. Directors’ Report 55

Directors’ Report continued Safety Managing the health and safety matters as a critical business activity. 15% Achieved zero recordable injuries in 2024. Designed and implemented robust engineering systems to ensure workplace safety. Remuneration Report continued Executive Remuneration continued Performance Based Remuneration – Short-Term Incentive continued The following table outlines the fiscal 2025 performance against the above short-term incentive criteria: Measure Measure Weighting Achievement People & Sustainability Recruitment and retention of key talent across the business, managing environmental compliance and promoting sustainable development. 15% Recruitment and retention of top talent is critical to IperionX’s long-term success. In 2024 we added 24 employees, growing the team to 52 employees. Obtained revalidation by UL for 100% recycled content for powder production in SLC, Utah. Product Innovation/ R&D/IP Ongoing innovation and protection of existing IP. 15% Confidential ongoing innovation and protection of existing IP. Completed full acquisition of the ‘Titanium Technologies’ from Blacksand in November – securing IP critical for commercialization and long-term success. Commercial and Government Engagements Focus on delivering numerous commercial and government contracts. 15% Significant progress above expectation on publicity announced and confidential commercial engagements. Significant progress above expectation on government contracts, including funding programs and other confidential engagements. Operations Focus on delivery of key scale-up targets. 15% The 1080 Building was transformed into near finished industrial titanium production hub over the year. The 1092 Building was transformed into the Advanced Manufacturing Center. Progress the Titan Project towards DFS and position for future development. Funding, Corporate, Financial and Investor Relations Focus on delivery and commercialization of our assets and balance sheet strength. 25% Raised US$100 million in capital across two successful equity placements (US$33 million in May, US$67 million in October). Added eight new institutional shareholders to the register. An exceptional +300% increase (or 4X) in the share price over CY2024. Inclusion in the ASX300 Index significantly increase share liquidity. 56

Directors’ Report continued Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman)1 200% 125,000 — —% Anastasios Arima (CEO) 200% 240,000 480,000 200% Toby Symonds (President and CSO) 200% 228,000 456,000 200% W. Scott Sparks (COO) 200% 125,000 250,000 200% Dominic Allen (CCO) 120% 120,000 150,000 125% Marcela Castro (CFO) 120% 125,000 150,000 120% Executive KMP Target STI (% of FR) Target STI (US$) Based on these performance outcomes, the table below outlines the STI awarded to executive KMP with respect to performance in fiscal 2025. During fiscal 2025, cash bonuses of US$1,486,000 (2024: US$734,560) were paid to executive KMP. STI awarded for 2025 % of target (US$) STI awarded Notes: Mr. Hannigan’s share-based payments includes 141,844 shares issued in lieu of his cash bonus of US$250,000, as approved by shareholders on June 27, 2025. Performance Based Remuneration – Long-Term Incentive The Group has a LTIP to reward executive KMP and other key employees and contractors for long-term performance. This plan is based on best practice for companies operating in the United States. This LTIP was designed in consultation with Pearl Meyer, our U.S. based remuneration consultant. The Plan provides for the issuance of Performance Rights, RSU’s, and Unlisted Options to eligible employees and contractors as part of their remuneration and incentive arrangements in order to attract and retain their services and to provide an incentive linked to the performance of the Group. The allocation to Performance Rights, RSU’s and/or Options is determined by the Board based on the assessment of the contribution by the executive KMP to all aspects of the company’s growth. To achieve its corporate objectives, the Group needs to attract, incentivize, and retain its executive KMP and other key employees and contractors. The Board believes that grants made to eligible participants under the Plan will provide a useful tool to underpin the Group’s employment and engagement strategy, and enables the Group to: recruit, incentivize and retain KMP and other key employees and contractors needed to achieve the Group’s business objectives; link the reward of key staff with the achievement of strategic goals and the long-term performance of the Group; align the financial interest of participants of the Plan with those of Shareholders; and provide incentives to participants of the Plan to focus on superior performance that creates Shareholder value. The issuance of Performance Rights, RSUs and Options for fiscal 2025 is considered in-line with U.S. based peer group comparators and aligned with linking sustained Company performance, retention and long-term shareholder value. Directors’ Report 57

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Executive Remuneration continued Performance Based Remuneration – Long-Term Incentive continued The table below summarizes RSU’s, Performance Rights and Options that were granted, vested or lapsed relating to executive KMP remuneration during fiscal 2025. Granted during Exercised or converted Lapsed or expired 2025 during 2025 during 2025 RSU’s 1,555,640 (1,019,668) – Performance Rights 3,473,409 (17,066,667) – Options 1,158,074 (625,000,00) – As at June 30, 2025, the Company had a total of 25,206,752 outstanding Performance Rights, RSU’s and Unlisted Options on issue that had been granted to employees and contractors of the Company as part of their remuneration arrangements, representing 7.30% of the Company’s total shares on issue (on a fully undiluted basis). The Board considers this reasonable and in-line with peer group comparators. (i) Performance Rights The LTIP provides for the issuance of Performance Rights to eligible participants which, upon satisfaction of the relevant performance conditions attached to the Performance Rights, will result in the issue of an Ordinary Share for each Performance Right. Performance Rights are issued for no consideration and no amount is payable upon conversion thereof. Performance Rights granted under the Plan to eligible participants will be linked to the achievement by the Group of certain performance conditions as determined by the Board from time to time. These performance conditions must be satisfied in order for the Performance Rights to vest. Upon Performance Rights vesting, Ordinary Shares are automatically issued for no consideration. If a performance condition of a Performance Right is not achieved by the expiry date, then the Performance Right will lapse. During fiscal 2025, 3,473,409 Performance Rights were granted to executive KMP as outlined in the table below. These Performance Rights were granted to selected executive KMP as one-off grants as either retention awards or sign-on awards. These awards are linked to the creation of shareholder value growth through the utilization of “out of the money” share price hurdles and continuous service periods acting as a retention tool for our executives. In addition to performance criteria, these Performance Rights also had a four-year continuous service period requirement, as well as an additional one-year lock-up period, meaning even if the vesting condition was achieved, the KMP is required to be in continuous service until April 10, 2030. In determining the size of grant, the Board engaged a third party consultant to value the performance rights utilizing a Monte Carlo simulation model, with a start date of 10 April 2025 (date of board approval). This resulted in a fair value, (as at 10 April 2025) of A$2.24 for the A$6 performance rights, A$2.11 for the A$7 performance rights and A$1.99 for the A$8 performance rights. The fair value of these performance rights were updated when shareholder approval was received and / or when the performance rights were actually issued. For accounting purposes, the share price at the date of issuance was utilized in the financial statements. 58

Directors’ Report continued Toby Symonds (President and CSO) 1,247,085 Tied to performance and shareholder Three different performance right value creation. The share price hurdles awards of 415,695. All three award vest were between 100-200% above the 30-day upon four years of continuous service VWAP at the time of board approval and the Company achieving a 30-day (10 April 2025). VWAP of at least A$6.00 per share for Represents 70% of LTIP award for 2025. one award, A$7.00 for one award, A$8.00 for one award, expiring April 10, 2031. Anastasios Arima (CEO) 1,307,418 Tied to performance and shareholder Three different performance right value creation. The share price hurdles awards of 435,806. All three award vest were between 100-200% above the upon four years of continuous service 30-day VWAP at the time of board and the Company achieving a 30-day approval (10 April 2025). VWAP of at least A$6.00 per share for Represents 70% of LTIP award for 2025. one award, A$7.00 for one award, A$8.00 for one award, expiring April 10, 2031. Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman) 918,906 Tied to performance and shareholder Three different performance right value creation. The share price hurdles awards of 306,302. All three award vest were between 100-200% above the upon four years of continuous service 30-day VWAP at the time of board and the Company achieving a 30-day approval (10 April 2025). VWAP of at least A$6.00 per share for Represents 70% of LTIP award for 2025. one award, A$7.00 for one award, A$8.00 for one award, expiring April 10, 2031. KMP No. Performance rights awarded 2025 Rationale Vesting conditions (ii) Restricted Stock Units In fiscal 2025, the Board chose to grant RSUs to attract and retain executives. The use of RSUs aligns with the long-term incentive vehicles used by peer group comparators. The RSUs vest and convert into an equivalent number of Ordinary Shares over a three-year period with a three-year vesting cliff. If the relevant service-based vesting condition is not met by the applicable expiry date, the RSUs will automatically lapse. During fiscal 2025, 1,555,640 RSUs were granted to executive KMP as outlined in the table below. In determining the size of grant, the Board utilized an issue price of A$2.82, being the 30-day VWAP of the Company’s Shares on ASX over the 30-days to 10 April 2025. For accounting purposes, the share price at the date of issuance was utilized in the financial statements. No. RSU’s Executive KMP Notes awarded 2025 Todd Hannigan (Executive Chairman) 30% of LTIP award 295,130 Anastasios Arima (CEO) 30% of LTIP award 419,910 Toby Symonds (President and CSO) 30% of LTIP award 400,533 W. Scott Sparks (COO) 30% of LTIP award 178,866 Dominic Allen (CCO) 30% of LTIP award 178,866 Marcela Castro (CFO) 30% of LTIP award 82,335 Directors’ Report 59

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Executive Remuneration continued Performance Based Remuneration – Long-Term Incentive continued (iii) Unlisted Options The LTIP provides for the issuance of Unlisted Options to eligible participants. The Board’s policy is to grant Unlisted Options to KMP with exercise prices at or above market share price (at the time of agreement). As such, the Unlisted Options granted to KMP are generally only of benefit if the KMP performs to the level whereby the value of the Group increases sufficiently to warrant exercising the Unlisted Options granted. Other than service-based vesting conditions (if any) and the exercise price required to exercise the Unlisted Options, there are no additional performance criteria on the Unlisted Options granted to KMP. The Group prohibits executive KMP from entering into arrangements to limit their exposure to Unlisted Options granted as part of their remuneration package. In determining the size of grant, the Board engaged a third party consultant to value the Unlisted Options utilizing a Black Scholes model, with a start date of 10 April 2025 (date of board approval). This resulted in a fair value of the options of A$1.07. The fair value of these unlisted options were updated when the unlisted options were actually issued. For accounting purposes, the share price at the date of issuance was utilized in the financial statements. During fiscal 2025, Unlisted Options were granted to executive KMP as outlined in the table below. No. Unlisted options awarded KMP 2025 Rationale Vesting conditions W. Scott Sparks (COO) 470,701 Tied to performance and shareholder Vest upon three years of continuous service value creation. The option exercise price and the Company and are exercisable a was ~75% above the 30-day VWAP at the A$5.00 each, expiring April 10, 2029. time of board approval. Represents 50% of LTIP award for 2025. Dominic Allen (COO) 470,701 Tied to performance and shareholder Vest upon three years of continuous service value creation. The option exercise price and the Company and are exercisable a was ~75% above the 30-day VWAP at the A$5.00 each, expiring April 10, 2029. time of board approval. Represents 50% of LTIP award for 2025. Marcela Castro (CFO) 216,672 Tied to performance and shareholder Vest upon three years of continuous service value creation. The option exercise price and the Company and are exercisable a was ~75% above the 30-day VWAP at the A$5.00 each, expiring April 10, 2029. time of board approval. Represents 50% of LTIP award for 2025. 60

Directors’ Report continued Non-Executive Director Remuneration The Board’s policy is to remunerate Non-Executive Directors at market rates for comparable companies for time, commitment and responsibilities. Given the current size, nature and risks of the Group, RSUs, Unlisted Options, and Performance Rights have been used to attract and retain Non-Executive Directors, where deemed appropriate. The Board determines payments to the Non-Executive Directors and reviews their remuneration annually, based on market practice, duties and accountability. Independent external advice is sought when required. The maximum aggregate amount of fees that can be paid to Non-Executive Directors is subject to approval by shareholders at a General Meeting. Director’s fees paid to Non-Executive Directors accrue on a daily basis. Fees for Non-Executive Directors are not linked to the performance of the economic entity. However, to align Directors’ interests with shareholder interests, the Directors are encouraged to hold shares in the Company and, subject to shareholder approval, on an annual basis, the Company grants each Non-Executive Director such number of RSUs calculated by dividing US$125,000 by the VWAP of a share on ASX over the five trading days immediately prior to the date of the notice of AGM of shareholders. The Lead Director receives an additional US$30,000 in annual equity grants. The Company prohibits Non-Executive Directors from entering into arrangements to limit their exposure to options granted as part of their remuneration package. The issuance of RSUs is in-line with U.S. based peer group comparators and aligned with linking sustained Company performance, retention and long-term Shareholder value. Fees for Non-Executive Directors are presently set at US$50,000 (2024: US$50,000) per annum. The Lead Director receives an additional US$30,000 per annum. These fees cover main board activities only. NEDs may receive additional remuneration for other services provided to the Company, including but not limited to, membership of committees. Committee fees are US$15,000 for the Chair of each committee (US$30,000 for the Audit Committee Chair) and US$10,000 for committee members. The Company reimburses NEDs for reasonable expenses incurred in performing their duties (including in relation to any authorized independent professional advice sought by the NEDs to assist them in carrying out their duties as Directors). These fees are in line with the 50th percentile median against the benchmarked peer comparator groups. During fiscal 2025, 212,430 RSUs were granted to NEDs as set out below. Lorraine Martin Audit Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee, 75,000 42,486 Vaughn Taylor Audit Committee1, Compensation Committee (Chair) 80,333 42,486 Tony Tripeny Audit Committee (Chair), Nominating and Governance Committee 19,167 42,486 Melissa Waller Nominating and Governance Committee (Chair), Compensation Committee 75,000 42,486 Beverly Wyse Audit Committee, Nominating and Governance Committee, Compensation Committee 80,000 42,486 Non-Executive Director Committee Director fees 2025 (US$) No. RSU’s awarded 2025 Notes: 1. Mr. Taylor served as Audit Committee Chair from July 1, 2024 through June 20, 2025 and was succeeded by Mr. Tripeny. During fiscal 2025, 476,494 RSUs and 300,000 Performance Rights held by NEDs vested and converted into Ordinary Shares. No Unlisted Options were exercised by NEDs during fiscal 2025. No RSUs, Unlisted Options or Performance Rights held by NEDs lapsed during fiscal 2025. Directors’ Report 61

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Relationship between Remuneration of KMP and Shareholder Wealth During the Group’s commercialization phase of the business, the Board anticipates that the Group will retain earnings (if any) and other cash resources for the commercialization of its metal technologies and the exploration and evaluation of its mineral properties. Accordingly, the Group does not currently have a policy with respect to the payment of dividends and returns of capital. Therefore, there was no relationship between the Board’s policy for determining, or in relation to, the nature and amount of remuneration of KMP and dividends paid and returns of capital by the Group during the current and previous four financial years. Discretionary annual cash bonuses are based upon achieving various non-financial KPI’s that are not based on share price or earnings, such as the successful commercialization of the Company’s metal technologies, the successful exploration and development of its mineral properties, sustainability measures, corporate activities, safety measures, and business development activities. However, as noted above, certain KMP are granted Performance Rights, RSUs, and/or Unlisted Options which generally will be of greater value to KMP if the value of the Group’s shares increases (subject to vesting conditions being met). Relationship between Remuneration of KMP and Earnings As discussed above, the Group is currently commercializing its metal technologies and does not currently undertake profitable operations until sometime after the successful commercialization, production and sales of its metals. Accordingly, the Board does not consider earnings during the current and previous four financial years when determining, and in relation to, the nature and amount of remuneration of KMP. Remuneration Governance The Board has overall accountability for the oversight of the Company’s remuneration approach for Executive KMP and NEDs, having regard to the recommendations made by the Compensation Committee. The Compensation Committee reviews and makes recommendations to the Board on remuneration and at-risk remuneration policies, taking into account the Company’s strategic objectives, corporate governance principles, market practice and stakeholder interests. 62

Directors’ Report continued The diagram below shows the Company’s remuneration governance framework, the key responsibilities of the Board, Compensation Committee and management. Board The Board is responsible for: Appointing, monitoring and managing the performance of the Company’s Executive Directors and senior management. Determing the remuneration, monitoring the performance and succession planning of NEDs and Executive KMP. Reviewing and approving the performance of individual Board members and senior executives as well as any policies concerned with the remuneration of any employee. Compensation Committee (CC) The CC is responsible for: Reviewing and advising the Board on the composition of the Board and its committees. Advising on the process of recruitment, appointment and re-election of directors. Reviewing the performance of the Board, the Chairperson, the executive KMP and other individual members of the Board. Ensuring proper succession plans are in place for consideration by the Board. Assisting the Board with the establishment of remuneration policies and practices for the Company’s CEO & MD, senior managers and staff, as well as to ensure director compensation is fair and current. Evaluating the competencies required of prospective executive KMP, identify those prospective KMP and establish their degree of independence. Management Management provides relevant information and analysis required to support decision making, this includes for remuneration related considerations. External Consultants The CC may engage external advisors to obtain relevant information and an external perspective regarding remuneration related matters. Remuneration Advisors During fiscal 2025, the Compensation Committee approved the engagement of Pearl Meyer to provide remuneration recommendations regarding the remuneration quantum for KMP and advise on LTIP and STIP structures. The Compensation Committee considered the recommendations, along with other factors, in making its remuneration decisions. Both the Compensation Committee and Pearl Meyer are satisfied the advice received from CAP is free from undue influence from the KMP to whom the remuneration recommendations apply. US$114,400 was paid to remuneration advisors during the 2025 fiscal year. Directors’ Report 63

Directors’ Report continued Remuneration Report continued Emoluments of KMP Details of the nature and amount of each element of the emoluments of each KMP of the Group for the year ended June 30, 2025, are as follows: Short-term benefits Directors Todd Hannigan1 317,500 – – 19,411 – 834,131 1,171,042 71% Anastasios Arima 475,000 480,000 7,857 – – 1,047,347 2,010,204 52% Lorraine Martin 75,000 – – – – 111,052 186,052 60% Vaughn Taylor 80,833 – – 9,296 – 93,217 183,346 51% Tony Tripeny 19,167 – – – – 19,887 39,054 – Melissa Waller 75,000 – – – – 111,052 186,052 60% Beverly Wyse 80,000 – – – – 111,052 191,052 58% Other KMP Toby Symonds 451,500 456,000 23,010 9,075 – 2,040,207 2,979,792 68% W. Scott Sparks 282,500 250,000 14,674 8,800 – 465,379 1,021,353 46% Dominic Allen 282,500 150,000 49,425 – – 278,638 760,563 37% Marcela Castro 270,000 150,000 23,010 16,050 – 384,108 843,168 46% Total 2,409,000 1,486,000 117,976 62,632 – 5,496,070 9,571,678 Salary Post- employment Share-based Termination payment Perfor- mance & fees Cash bonus Other benefits benefits expense Total related 2025 US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ % Notes: 1. Mr. Hannigan’s share-based payments includes 141,844 shares issued in lieu of his cash bonus of US$250,000, as approved by shareholders on June 27, 2025. 64

Directors’ Report continued Short-term benefits Salary & Post- employment Termination Share-based expense Perfor- mance fees Cash bonus Other benefits benefits payment Total related 2024 US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ US$ % Directors Todd Hannigan 236,667 – – 18,025 – 139,902 394,594 35% Anastasios Arima 366,667 180,000 9,190 – – 279,804 835,661 55% Lorraine Martin 70,000 – – – – 164,819 234,819 70% Vaughn Taylor 80,000 – – 17,608 – 79,654 177,262 45% Melissa Waller 75,000 – – – – 164,819 239,819 69% Beverly Wyse 80,000 – – – – 164,819 244,819 67% Other KMP Toby Symonds 350,000 174,000 41,116 5,306 – 1,114,375 1,684,797 76% W. Scott Sparks 221,667 82,500 19,005 10,917 – 163,815 497,904 49% Dominic Allen 221,667 82,500 106,270 5,277 – 62,066 477,779 30% Marcela Castro1 201,763 50,000 20,769 7,000 – 131,489 411,021 44% Gregory Swan2 – 65,560 – – – – 65,560 100% Jeanne McMullin3 240,341 100,000 26,276 4,167 — 283,784 654,568 59% Total 2,143,772 734,560 222,626 68,300 – 2,749,346 5,918,604 Notes: Ms. Castro was appointed Chief Accounting Officer effective September 12, 2023, and Chief Financial Officer effective December 21, 2023. Mr. Swan ceased to be CFO and KMP effective December 21, 2023. Mr Swan provides services as the Company Secretary through a services agreement with the Apollo Group. During the 2024 financial year, Apollo Group was paid or is payable US$270,763 (A$413,000) for the provision of serviced office facilities and administrative, accounting and company secretarial services to the Group. Ms. McMullin was not a KMP for fiscal year 2025. Loans with Key Management Personnel No loans were provided to or received from KMP during the year ended June 30, 2025 (2024: Nil). Other Transactions with Key Management Personnel Performance Industries, Inc., a company associated with Mr. W. Scott Sparks, COO of the Company, was paid or is payable US$0 during fiscal 2025 (2024: US$53,138) for the provision of engineering and construction services to the Group. The Company considers that the services provided by Performance Industries, Inc. were provided on an arm’s length or better basis. Directors’ Report 65

Directors’ Report continued Directors Todd Hannigan 1,214,036 (3,659,333) – 3,559,737 10,208,258 584,131 Anastasios Arima 1,727,328 (4,943,667) – 5,064,786 10,692,507 1,047,347 Lorraine Martin 42,486 (135,790) – 122,557 339,254 111,052 Vaughn Taylor 42,486 (369,124) – 122,557 996,310 93,217 Tony Tripeny 42,486 – – 93,867 – 19,887 Melissa Waller 42,486 (135,790) – 122,557 339,254 111,052 Beverly Wyse 42,486 (135,790) – 122,557 339,254 111,052 Other KMP Toby Symonds 1,647,618 (4,969,334) – 3,007,791 13,379,556 2,040,207 W. Scott Sparks 649,567 (479,667) – 1,178,202 1,228,406 465,379 Dominic Allen 649,567 (4,079,667) – 1,178,202 11,460,405 278,638 Marcela Castro 299,007 (579,667) – 455,838 1,510,907 384,108 Total 6,399,553 (19,487,829) – 15,028,650 50,494,111 5,246,070 2025 No. of options, rights and RSU’s granted during year # No. of options, rights and RSU’s exercised during year # rights and RSU’s lapsed during year # rights and RSU’s granted during year1 US$ rights and RSU’s exercised during year2 US$ No. of options, Value of options, Value of options, rights and RSU’s included in remuneration for year US$ Remuneration Report continued Options, Rights and RSU’s Granted to Key Management Personnel Details of Unlisted Options, Performance Rights and RSU’s granted, exercised or lapsed for each KMP of the Group during the 2025 financial year are as follows: Value of options, Notes: Determined at the time of grant per AASB 2, using an exchange rate of US$0.6556=A$1.00, being the average exchange rate for 2025. Determined at the time of exercise or conversion at the intrinsic value using the exchange rate on the date of exercise. 66

Directors’ Report continued Details of Unlisted Options, Performance Rights and RSUs granted by the Company to each KMP of the Group during the financial year are as follows: Vesting 2025 Security class Grant date Expiry date Service vesting date Exercise price A$ hurdle (30-day VWAP) Grant date fair value1 A$ Number granted Todd Hannigan RSUs 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$4.750 295,130 Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$6.00 A$4.480 306,302 Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$7.00 A$4.380 306,302 Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 A$8.00 A$4.290 306,302 Anastasios RSUs 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$4.750 419,910 Arima Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$6.00 A$4.480 435,806 Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$7.00 A$4.380 435,806 Rights 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 A$8.00 A$4.290 435,806 Lorraine
Martin RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-25 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-26 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-27 – – A$4.400 14,162 Vaughn
Taylor RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-25 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-26 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-27 – – A$4.400 14,162 Tony
Tripeny RSUs 9-Mar-25 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-25 – – A$3.370 14,162 RSUs 9-Mar-25 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-26 – – A$3.370 14,162 RSUs 9-Mar-25 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-27 – – A$3.370 14,162 Melissa
Waller RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-25 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-26 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-27 – – A$4.400 14,162 Beverly
Wyse RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-25 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-26 – – A$4.400 14,162 RSUs 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 16-Dec-27 – – A$4.400 14,162 Toby
Symonds RSUs 15-May-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$3.110 400,533 Rights 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$6.00 A$2.760 415,695 Rights 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 – A$7.00 A$2.680 415,695 Rights 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 10-Apr-29 A$8.00 A$2.600 415,695 W.
Scott Sparks Options 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 A$5.00 – A$2.260 470,701 RSUs 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$4.100 178,866 Dominic
Allen Options 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 A$5.00 – A$2.260 470,701 RSUs 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$4.100 178,866 Marcela
Castro Options 23-May-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 A$5.00 – A$1.860 216,672 RSUs 23-May-25 10-Apr-29 10-Apr-28 – – A$3.550 82,335 Directors’ Report 67

Directors’ Report continued Directors Todd Hannigan 4,538,000 1,214,036 (3,659,333) – 2,092,703 – Anastasios Arima 6,581,000 1,727,328 (4,943,667) – 3,364,661 – Lorraine Martin 544,768 42,486 (135,790) – 451,464 270,729 Vaughn Taylor 578,102 42,486 (369,124) – 251,464 70,729 Tony Tripeny – 42,486 – – 42,486 – Melissa Waller 544,768 42,486 (135,790) – 451,464 270,729 Beverly Wyse 544,768 42,486 (135,790) – 451,464 270,729 Other KMP Toby Symonds 6,684,667 1,647,618 (4,969,334) – 3,362,951 – W. Scott Sparks 2,049,000 649,567 (479,667) – 2,218,900 200,000 Dominic Allen 5,344,000 649,567 (4,079,667) – 1,913,900 425,000 Marcela Castro 739,000 299,007 (579,667) – 458,340 – Total 28,148,073 6,399,553 (19,487,829) – 15,059,797 1,507,916 2025 Held at July 1, 2024 Granted as remuneration Exercise of options, rights and RSUs Net change other Held at June 30, 2025 Vested and exercisable at June 30, 2025 Directors Todd Hannigan 17,565,255 2,520,000 141,844 – 3,659,333 – 4,077,343 (1,260,000) 25,443,775 1,260,000 Anastasios Arima 6,461,446 4,500,000 – – 4,943,667 – – (2,250,000) 11,405,113 2,250,000 Lorraine Martin 468,699 – – – 135,790 – 158,655 – 763,144 – Vaughn Taylor 562,194 – – – 369,124 – – – 931,318 – Tony Tripeny – – – – – – – – – – Melissa Waller 168,699 – – – 135,790 – – – 304,489 – Beverly Wyse 168,699 – – – 135,790 – – – 304,489 – Other KMP Toby Symonds 523,504 – – – 4,969,334 – (2,304,692) – 3,188,146 – W. Scott Sparks 1,060,000 1,440,000 – – 479,667 – (145,696) (720,000) 1,393,971 720,000 Dominic Allen 2,927,500 3,060,000 – – 4,079,667 – (2,499,999) (1,530,000) 4,507,168 1,530,000 Marcela Castro – – – – 579,667 – (238,872) – 340,795 – Total 29,905,996 11,520,000 141,844 – 19,487,829 – (953,261) (5,760,000) 48,582,408 5,760,000 Shareholdings of Key Management Personnel Granted as Held at July 1, 2024 remuneration 2025 Ord1 Perf2 Ord1 Perf2 Exercise of options and rights Ord1 Perf2 Net change other Ord1 Perf2 Held at June 30, 2025 Ord1 Perf2 Notes: ‘Ord’ means Ordinary Shares. ‘Perf’ means Performance Shares issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021. For the avoidance of doubt, these Performance Shares do not form part of remuneration. Remuneration Report continued Options, Rights and RSU’s Granted to Key Management Personnel continued 68

Directors’ Report continued Employment Contracts with Key Management Personnel Mr. Arima, CEO and Managing Director, has an employment agreement with the Group which may be terminated upon six months’ advance written notice, unless mutually agreed upon with the Company. Mr. Arima receives a fixed remuneration component of US$550,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$400,000) per annum and a discretionary target annual bonus of US$385,000 (2024: US$240,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. Mr. Symonds, President and CSO, has an employment agreement with the Group which may be terminated upon six months’ advance written notice, unless mutually agreed upon with the Company. Mr. Symonds receives a fixed remuneration component of US$523,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$380,000) per annum and a discretionary annual bonus of up to US$366,000 (2024: US$228,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. Mr. Hannigan, Executive Chairman, has a director appointment letter with the Group. Mr. Hannigan receives a fixed remuneration component of US$385,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$250,000) per annum and a discretionary target annual bonus of US$270,000 (2024: US$125,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. Mr. Allen, CCO, has a service agreement with the Group which may be terminated upon three months’ advance written notice, unless mutually agreed upon with the Company. Mr. Allen receives a fixed remuneration component of US$315,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$250,200) per annum and a discretionary target annual bonus of US$158,000 (2024: US$125,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. Mr. Sparks, COO, has an employment agreement with the Group which may be terminated upon six months’ advance written notice, unless mutually agreed upon with the Company. Mr. Sparks receives a fixed remuneration component of US$315,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$250,000) per annum and a discretionary target annual bonus of US$158,000 (2024: US$125,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. Ms. Castro, CFO, has an employment agreement with the Group which may be terminated upon four weeks’ advance written notice, unless mutually agreed upon with the Company. Ms. Castro receives a fixed remuneration component of US$290,000 starting in January 2025, (2024: US$250,000) per annum, a discretionary target annual bonus of US$145,000 (2024: US$125,000) to be paid upon the successful completion of KPIs as determined by the Board and is entitled to participate in the LTIP on terms to be determined by the Board. The annual discretionary target bonus is subject to the Plan rules, including the scorecards and weightings related to the Short-Term Incentive Plan as described in “Performance Based Remuneration – Short-Term Incentive”. All NEDs have a letter of appointment confirming the terms and conditions of their appointment as Director of the Company. End of Remuneration Report. Directors’ Report 69

Directors’ Report continued Number eligible to attend Number attended Number eligible to attend Number attended Number eligible to attend Number attended Number eligible to attend Number attended Anastasios Arima 10 10 3 3 – – 3 2 Todd Hannigan 10 10 – – – – – – Lorraine Martin 10 10 3 2 – – 3 3 Vaughn Taylor 10 9 3 3 4 4 – – Tony Tripeny 5 4 – – – – – – Melissa Waller 10 10 – – 4 4 3 3 Beverly Wyse 10 10 3 2 4 4 3 2 Board Meetings Audit Committee Meetings Compensation Committee Meetings1 Directors’ Meetings The number of meetings of directors held during the year and the number of meetings attended by each director were as follows: Nominating and Governance Committee Meetings2 Notes: The name of the “Remuneration & Nomination Committee” was changed to the “Compensation Committee” effective from June 20, 2025. The name of the “Environmental, Social and Governance Committee” was changed to the “Nominating & Governance Committee” effective from June 20, 2025. Non-audit Services There were no non-audit services provided by the Company’s auditor, PwC, or by another person or firm on the auditor’s behalf, during the financial year. Auditor’s Independence Declaration The lead auditor’s independence declaration for the year ended June 30, 2025, has been received and can be found on page 71 of the Annual Report. Signed in accordance with a resolution of the directors. Anastasios Arima CEO and Managing Director September 30, 2025 70

PricewaterhouseCoopers, ABN 52 780 433 757 Brookfield Place, Level 15, 125 St Georges Terrace, PERTH WA 6000, GPO Box D198, PERTH WA 6840 T: +61 8 9238 3000, F: +61 8 9238 3999, www.pwc.com.au pwc.com.au Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation. Auditor’s Independence Declaration As lead auditor for the audit of IperionX Limited for the year ended 30 June 2025, I declare that to the best of my knowledge and belief, there have been: no contraventions of the auditor independence requirements of the Corporations Act 2001 in relation to the audit; and no contraventions of any applicable code of professional conduct in relation to the audit. This declaration is in respect of IperionX Limited and the entities it controlled during the period. Craig Heatley Partner PricewaterhouseCoopers Perth 30 September 2025 Auditor’s Independence Declaration Auditor’s Independence Declaration 71

Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income Year ended June 30, 2025 Continuing operations Research and development costs 2 (12,748,973) (8,712,610) Exploration and evaluation expenses (2,894,369) (1,950,583) Corporate and administrative expenses 2 (10,686,376) (4,516,393) Business development expenses (3,373,992) (3,646,141) Share–based payment expenses 20(a) (9,568,191) (3,791,541) Finance income 2 3,550,633 546,029 Finance costs 2 (306,250) (187,119) Other income and expenses 2 678,843 414,712 Loss before income tax (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Income tax expense 3 – – Loss for the year (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Loss attributable to shareholders of IperionX Limited (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Other comprehensive income/(loss) Items that may be reclassified subsequently to profit or loss: Exchange differences arising on translation into presentation currency 15(f) (1,602,139) (170,014) Other comprehensive loss for the year, net of tax (1,602,139) (170,014) Total comprehensive loss for the year (36,950,814) (22,013,660) Total comprehensive loss attributable to shareholders of IperionX Limited (36,950,814) (22,013,660) Basic loss per share (US$ per share) 17 (0.12) (0.10) Diluted loss per share (US$ per share) 17 (0.12) (0.10) Notes 2025 US$ 2024 US$ The above Consolidated Statement of Profit or Loss and Other Comprehensive Income should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes. 72

Consolidated Statement of Financial Position At June 30, 2025 ASSETS Current Assets Cash and cash equivalents 5 54,814,125 33,157,356 Trade and other receivables 6 823,268 2,302,010 Prepayments 7 3,238,894 6,071,735 Inventories – 16,920 Total Current Assets 58,876,287 41,548,021 Non-Current Assets Property, plant and equipment 8 25,197,638 7,773,812 Intangible assets 9 13,550,993 – Exploration and evaluation assets 10 6,512,326 6,114,061 Prepayments 7 897,735 – Total Non-Current Assets 46,158,692 13,887,873 TOTAL ASSETS 105,034,979 55,435,894 LIABILITIES Current Liabilities Trade and other payables 11 7,489,397 2,317,830 Loans and borrowings 12 472,018 445,755 Provisions 467,001 287,796 Total Current Liabilities 8,428,416 3,051,381 Non-Current Liabilities Other long-term liability 700,000 – Loans and borrowings 12 3,462,564 1,044,918 Total Non-Current Liabilities 4,162,564 1,044,918 TOTAL LIABILITIES 12,590,980 4,096,299 NET ASSETS 92,443,999 51,339,595 EQUITY Contributed equity 14 197,985,920 112,959,638 Reserves 15 3,688,804 12,262,007 Accumulated losses 16 (109,230,725) (73,882,050) TOTAL EQUITY 92,443,999 51,339,595 Notes 2025 US$ 2024 US$ The above Consolidated Statement of Financial Position should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes. Consolidated Statement of Financial Position 73

Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity Year ended June 30, 2025 Balance at July 1, 2024 Net loss for the year Exchange differences arising on translation into presentation currency 112,959,638 – – 13,440,265 – – (1,178,258) – (1,602,139) (73,882,050) (35,348,675) – 51,339,595 (35,348,675) (1,602,139) Total comprehensive loss for the year – – (1,602,139) (35,348,675) (36,950,814) Issue of shares – share placement 70,919,564 – – – 70,919,564 Issue of shares – exercise of options 205,525 – – – 205,525 Issue of shares – conversion of RSUs 2,094,041 (2,094,041) – – – Issue of shares – conversion of rights 13,724,952 (13,724,952) – – – Issue of shares to consultants 470,262 (470,262) – – – Issue of shares to Director shares in lieu of bonus 250,000 (250,000) – – – Share issue costs (2,638,062) – – – (2,638,062) Share-based payment expense – 9,568,191 – – 9,568,191 Balance at June 30, 2025 197,985,920 6,469,201 (2,780,397) (109,230,725) 92,443,999 Balance at July 1, 2023 58,764,248 15,004,052 (1,008,244) (52,196,828) 20,563,228 Net loss for the year – – – (21,843,646) (21,843,646) Exchange differences arising on translation into presentation currency – – (170,014) – (170,014) Total comprehensive loss for the year – – (170,014) (21,843,646) (22,013,660) Issue of shares – share placement 45,740,157 – – – 45,740,157 Issue of shares – exercise of options 4,335,005 (1,743,440) – – 2,591,565 Issue of shares – conversion of RSU’s 225,734 (225,734) – – – Issue of shares – conversion of rights 2,757,730 (2,757,730) – – – Issue of shares to Blacksand 2,000,000 – – – 2,000,000 Issue of shares to consultants 470,000 (470,000) – – – Share issue costs (1,333,236) – – – (1,333,236) Expiry of employee rights – (158,424) – 158,424 – Share-based payment expense – 3,791,541 – – 3,791,541 Balance at June 30, 2024 112,959,638 13,440,265 (1,178,258) (73,882,050) 51,339,595 Contributed equity US$ Share-based payments reserve US$ Foreign currency translation reserve US$ Accumulated losses US$ Total US$ The above Consolidated Statement of Changes in Equity should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes. 74

Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows Year ended June 30, 2025 Operating activities Payments to suppliers and employees (24,240,649) (19,215,938) Receipts from third-parties 569,484 183,159 Interest paid (329,740) (120,313) Interest received 2,203,220 546,029 Net cash flows used in operating activities 5 (21,797,685) (18,607,063) Investing activities Purchase of property, plant and equipment 8 (16,963,016) (5,018,093) Proceeds from sale of property, plant and equipment 8 9,417 2,040,083 Purchase of intangible assets 9 (6,678,750) – Purchase of exploration and evaluation assets 10 (644,661) (3,051,559) Blacksand option prepayments 7 – (500,000) Net cash flows used in investing activities (24,277,010) (6,529,569) Financing activities Proceeds from issue of shares 71,125,089 48,331,724 Share issue costs (2,615,882) (1,315,725) Repayment of borrowings (5,826) (5,970) Payment of principal portion of lease liabilities (511,749) (417,866) Net cash flows from financing activities 67,991,632 46,592,163 Net increase in cash and cash equivalents 21,916,937 21,455,531 Net foreign exchange differences (260,168) (236,116) Cash and cash equivalents at beginning of the year 33,157,356 11,937,941 Cash and cash equivalents at the end of the year 5 54,814,125 33,157,356 Supplemental cash flow information: Property, plant, equipment and intangible additions in accounts payable and other accrued liabilities 2,508,971 734,708 Notes 2025 US$ 2024 US$ The above Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows should be read in conjunction with the accompanying notes. Consolidated Statement of Cash Flows 75

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements Year ended June 30, 2025 1. Statement of Material Accounting Policies The material accounting policies adopted in preparing the consolidated financial statements of IperionX Limited (“IperionX” or “Company”) and its consolidated entities (“Consolidated Entity” or “Group”) for the years ended June 30, 2025 and 2024 are stated to assist in a general understanding of the consolidated financial statements. IperionX is a for-profit company limited by shares, incorporated and domiciled in Australia. Our ordinary shares are listed on the Australian Securities Exchange, or ASX, under the symbol “IPX”, and our American Depository Shares, or ADSs, each representing ten (10) of our ordinary shares, are listed on the Nasdaq Capital Market, or Nasdaq, under the symbol “IPX”. The principal activities of the Group during the year consisted of the development of its titanium metal technologies and the development of its mineral properties in the United States. The Group is operating a U.S. based, integrated titanium business to support a range of advanced industries, including consumer electronics, aerospace, defense, medical, bicycles, additive manufacturing and automotive. We expect to offer a range of titanium products and alloys for customers across these key industries. Our portfolio of assets includes our operations at the Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Halifax County, Virginia; our Titan Project in Tennessee, which is in the exploration stage; and IPF R&D center in Salt Lake City, Utah, that together are re-shoring a sustainable titanium supply chain in the U.S. The consolidated financial statements of the Group for the year ended June 30, 2025 were authorized for issue in accordance with a resolution of the Directors on September 30, 2025. (a) Basis of Preparation The financial report is a general purpose financial report, which has been prepared in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards as issued by the AASB and the Corporations Act 2001. The financial report also complies with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board. The consolidated financial report has also been prepared on a historical cost basis, except for other financial assets, which have been measured at fair value. The consolidated financial statements are presented in United States dollars (US$ or $). Going Concern The financial statements have been prepared on the going concern basis, which contemplates the continuity of normal business activity and the realization of assets and the settlement of liabilities in the normal course of business. The Group had net outflows from operating and investing activities of US$46 million for fiscal 2025 (2024: US$25 million). At June 30, 2025, the Group has cash and cash equivalents of US$55 million (2024: US$33 million). On July 29th, 2025, the Company completed the placement of 14 million new fully paid ordinary shares at A$5.00 per share, to raise gross proceeds of A$70 million (approximately US$46 million) before costs. Alleviation of Material Uncertainty Over Going Concern During the prior fiscal year ended June 30, 2024, the Company disclosed in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements that there were conditions and events that raised substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern within one year after the date that the financial statements were issued. 76

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued As of September 30, 2025, the Company concludes that the factors which led to the substantial doubt about the ability to continue as a going concern have been alleviated for at least twelve months from the issuance of these financial statements. The improvement in the Company’s financial condition is attributable to the following events and actions taken by management: Continuous support from investors in the form of capital raise: During the year ended June 30, 2025, the Company successfully secured additional share placement cash inflows of US$71 million. On July 29th, 2025, the Company completed the placement of additional 14 million new fully paid ordinary shares to raise proceeds of approximately US$46 million (A$70 million) before costs. Strong cash position: At June 30, 2025, the Group had cash reserves of US$55 million. The subsequent capital raise in July 2025 mentioned above increased the cash position to approximately US$100 million. Continuous Government support: The U.S. government continues to support IperionX’s efforts to re-shore a secure domestic titanium supply chain, building upon the initial US$13 million contract awarded to IperionX in 2023. As of June 30, 2025, the Company has been awarded approximately US$60 million in funding and grants through the U.S. DoW DPA Title III and IBAS programs. Subsequent inclusion in the ASX 200 index – attracting institutional investment and increasing liquidity, meaning improved access to capital These developments have led management to conclude that the substantial doubt about the Company’s ability to continue as a going concern has been alleviated. The Company’s current financial projections, which consider these positive developments, support the Company’s ability to meet its obligations as they become due for at least one year from the issuance of these financial statements. No adjustments are required to the carrying amounts or classification of assets and liabilities in the financial statements. New Standards, Interpretations and Amendments In the current year, the Group has adopted all of the new and revised Accounting Standards and Interpretations effective from July 1, 2024 that are mandatory. The adoption of the aforementioned standards has had no impact on the financial statements of the Company as at June 30, 2025. The Group has not early adopted any other standard, interpretation or amendment that has been issued but is not yet effective. Issued Standards and Interpretations not Early Adopted Australian Accounting Standards and Interpretations that have recently been issued or amended but are not yet effective have not been adopted by the Group for the year ended June 30, 2025. Those which may be relevant to the Group are set out in the table below, but these are not expected to have any significant impact on the Group’s financial statements: Standard/Interpretation Application Date of Standard Application Date for the Group AASB 2021-7(a-c) Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Effective Date of Amendments to AASB 10 and AASB 128 and Editorial Corrections January 1, 2025 July 1, 2025 AASB 2023-5 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Lack of Exchangeability January 1, 2025 July 1, 2025 AASB 2024-2 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Classification and Measurement of Financial Instruments January 1, 2026 July 1, 2026 AASB 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements January 1, 2027 July 1, 2027 AASB 2014-10 Amendments to Australian Accounting Standards – Sale or Contribution of Assets between an Investor and its Associate or Joint Venture January 1, 2028 July 1, 2028 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 77

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 1. Statement of Material Accounting Policies continued Issued Standards and Interpretations not Early Adopted continued A discussion on the impact of the adoption of AASB 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements is included below. The adoption of the other aforementioned standard is not expected to have any significant impact on the Group’s financial statements. AASB 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements AASB 18 Presentation and Disclosure in Financial Statements replaces AASB 101 Presentation of Financial Statements and introduces new requirements for the presentation of financial statements. AASB 18 will not change the recognition and measurement of items in the financial statements but will affect presentation and disclosure in the financial statements, including introducing new categories and subtotals in the statement of profit or loss, requiring the disclosure of management defined performance measures, and changing the grouping of information in the financial statements. Principles of Consolidation The consolidated financial statements incorporate the assets and liabilities of all subsidiaries of the Company. Control is achieved when the Company has power over the investee, is exposed, or has rights, to variable returns from its involvement with the investee and has the ability to use its power to affect its returns. The Company reassesses whether or not it controls an investee if facts and circumstances indicate that there are changes to one or more of the three elements of control listed above. When the Company has less than a majority of the voting rights of an investee, it has power over the investee when the voting rights are sufficient to give it the practical ability to direct the relevant activities of the investee unilaterally. The Company considers all relevant facts and circumstances in assessing whether or not the Company’s voting rights in an investee are sufficient to give it power. Subsidiaries are all those entities (including special purpose entities) over which the Company has the power to govern the financial and operating policies, so as to obtain benefits from its activities, generally accompanying a shareholding of more than one-half of the voting rights. The existence and effect of potential voting rights that are currently exercisable or convertible are considered when assessing whether the Company controls another entity. The financial statements of the subsidiaries are prepared for the same reporting period as the Company, using consistent accounting policies. Accounting policies of subsidiaries have been changed where necessary to ensure consistency with the policies adopted by the Company. Subsidiaries are fully consolidated from the date on which control is transferred to the Company. They are de-consolidated from the date that control ceases. Intercompany transactions and balances, income and expenses and profits and losses between Group companies, are eliminated. Foreign Currencies (i) Functional and Presentation Currency The functional currency of each of the Group’s entities is measured using the currency of the primary economic environment in which that entity operates. The parent Company’s functional currency is Australian dollars. The Group’s financial statements are presented in U.S. dollars which is the Group’s presentation currency. U.S. dollars has been chosen as the Group’s presentation currency to better reflect the Groupʼs business activities in the U.S. and to enhance comparability with its industry peer group, the majority of which report in U.S. dollars. 78

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Transactions and Balances Foreign currency transactions are translated into functional currency using the exchange rates prevailing at the date of the transaction. Foreign currency monetary items are translated at the year-end exchange rate. Non-monetary items measured at historical cost continue to be carried at the exchange rate at the date of the transaction. Non-monetary items measured at fair value are reported at the exchange rate at the date when fair values were determined. Exchange differences arising on the translation of monetary items are recognized in the income statement, except where deferred in equity as a qualifying cash flow or net investment hedge. Exchange differences arising on the translation of non-monetary items are recognized directly in equity to the extent that the gain or loss is directly recognized in equity, otherwise the exchange difference is recognized in the income statement. Group Companies The financial results and position of operations whose functional currency is different from the Group’s presentation currency are translated as follows: assets and liabilities are translated at year-end exchange rates prevailing at that reporting date; income and expenses are translated at average exchange rates for the year; and retained earnings are translated at the exchange rates prevailing at the date of the transaction. Exchange differences arising on translation into the presentation currency are transferred directly to the Group’s foreign currency translation reserve in equity. These differences are recognized in profit or loss in the year in which the operation is disposed. Cash and Cash Equivalents Cash and cash equivalents include cash on hand, deposits held at call with banks and other short-term highly liquid investments with original maturities of three months or less. Trade and Other Receivables Trade receivables are recognized initially at fair value and subsequently measured at amortized cost using the effective interest method, less allowance for any expected credit loss applying the simplified approach. If collection of the amounts is expected in one year or less, they are classified as current assets. If not, they are presented as non-current assets. Trade receivables are generally due for settlement within 30 days and therefore are all classified as current. As the majority of receivables are short term in nature, their carrying amount is assumed to be the same as their fair value. An estimate for the expected credit loss is made based on the historical risk of default and expected loss rates at the inception of the transaction. Inputs are selected for the ECL impairment calculation based on the Group’s past history, existing market conditions as well as forward looking estimates. Prepayments Prepayments represent payments in advance of receipt of goods or services. The Group recognizes a prepayment as an asset within other current and non-current assets when payment for goods or services has been made in advance of the Group obtaining a right to access those goods or services. These prepayments are assessed for indicators of impairment each year. If future economic benefits are no longer expected to occur, and economic benefits cannot be derived from the prepayment in any other way, the prepayment will be unrecognized. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 79

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Statement of Material Accounting Policies continued Property, Plant and Equipment Depreciation is provided on a straight-line basis over the estimated useful lives of the assets, except for land which is not depreciated. Currently the Group only has plant and equipment, buildings and leasehold improvements. Plant and equipment is depreciated over a period between 5 and 10 years. Buildings and leasehold improvements are depreciated over a period between 10 and 15 years. Intangible Assets Intangible assets are stated at cost, net of accumulated amortization and accumulated impairment losses, if any. Cost in relation to patents includes registration, documentation and other legal fees associated with obtaining the patent. The costs of internally generated intangible assets are not capitalized and the expense is reflected as research and development costs in the statement of income as it is incurred. The cost of intangible assets is amortized using the straight-line method over their estimated useful lives, and are reviewed at least annually. The expected changes in the useful life or in the pattern of consumption of the future economic benefits of the asset are accounted for when changing the period or amortization method, as appropriate, and they are treated as changes in the accounting estimates. Amortization expense is recognized in the statement of income as research and development costs. The Group’s primary patents each have a useful life between 8 years and 20 years. Further patents are granted in various jurisdictions to extend the territorial coverage of the primary patent. Intangible assets are tested for impairment when there is an indicator of impairment, as well as possible reversal of previous impairment losses. Exploration and Evaluation Expenditure Exploration and evaluation expenditures are accounted for in accordance with the ‘area of interest’ method and with AASB 6 Exploration for and Evaluation of Mineral Resources. Exploration and evaluation expenditure encompasses expenditures incurred by the Group in connection with the exploration for and evaluation of mineral resources before the technical feasibility and commercial viability of extracting a mineral resource are demonstrable. For each area of interest, expenditure incurred in the acquisition of rights to explore is capitalized and recognized as an exploration and evaluation asset. This includes option payments made to landowners under the Group’s option agreements with local landowners which are considered part of the acquisition costs. Exploration and evaluation assets are measured at cost at recognition and are recorded as an asset if: the rights to tenure of the area of interest are current; and at least one of the following conditions is also met: the exploration and evaluation expenditures are expected to be recouped through successful development and exploitation of the area of interest, or alternatively, by its sale; and exploration and evaluation activities in the area of interest have not at the reporting date reached a stage which permits a reasonable assessment of the existence or otherwise of economically recoverable reserves, and active and significant operations in, or in relation to, the area of interest are continuing. 80

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued All other exploration and evaluation expenditures are expensed as incurred. Once the technical feasibility and commercial viability of a program or project has been demonstrated with a bankable feasibility study, the carrying amount of the exploration and evaluation expenditure in respect of the area of interest is reclassified as a “mine development property”. Where a decision is made to proceed with development, accumulated expenditure is tested for impairment and transferred to development properties, and then amortized over the life of the reserves associated with the area of interest once mining operations have commenced. Recoverability of the carrying amount of the exploration and evaluation assets is dependent on successful development and commercial exploitation, or alternatively, sale of the respective areas of interest. Impairment Capitalized exploration costs are reviewed each reporting date to establish whether an indication of impairment exists. If any such indication exists, the recoverable amount of the capitalized exploration costs is estimated to determine the extent of the impairment loss (if any). Where an impairment loss subsequently reverses, the carrying amount of the asset is increased to the revised estimate of its recoverable amount, but only to the extent that the increased carrying amount does not exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined had no impairment loss been recognized for the asset. Research and Development Expenditure All costs associated with research and development are expensed as incurred. Research and development activities are directed toward the development of new products as well as improvements in existing titanium processing technologies. These costs primarily include salaries and related personnel expenses, subcontractor expenses, patent registration expenses, materials, depreciation and amortization, allocated overhead, and other development expenses associated with processing operations at our IPF in Utah and TPF in Virginia. This change from the Company’s former policy of capitalizing internally developed intellectual property had no impact on the financials. Trade and Other Payables These amounts represent liabilities for goods and services provided to the Group prior to the end of the financial year which are unpaid. The amounts are unsecured and are usually paid within 60 days of recognition. Trade and other payables are presented as current liabilities unless payment is not due within 12 months from the reporting date. They are recognized initially at their fair value and subsequently measured at amortized cost using the effective interest method. The carrying amounts of trade and other payables are considered to be the same as their fair values, due to their short-term nature. Provisions Provisions are recognized when the Group has a legal or constructive obligation, as a result of past events, for which it is probable that an outflow of economic benefits will result and that outflow can be reliably measured. Interest Income Interest income is recognized on a time proportionate basis that takes into account the effective yield on the financial asset. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 81

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 1. Statement of Material Accounting Policies continued Income Tax The income tax expense for the year is the tax payable on the current year’s taxable income based on the national income tax rate for each jurisdiction adjusted by changes in deferred tax assets and liabilities attributable to temporary differences between the tax bases of assets and liabilities and their carrying amounts in the financial statements, and to unused tax losses. Deferred tax assets and liabilities are recognized for temporary differences at the tax rates expected to apply when the assets are recovered or liabilities are settled, based on those tax rates which are enacted or substantively enacted for each jurisdiction. The relevant tax rates are applied to the cumulative amounts of deductible and taxable temporary differences to measure the deferred tax asset or liability. An exception is made for certain temporary differences arising from the initial recognition of an asset or a liability. No deferred tax asset or liability is recognized in relation to these temporary differences if they arose on goodwill or in a transaction, other than a business combination, that at the time of the transaction did not affect either accounting profit or taxable profit or loss. Deferred tax liabilities and assets are not recognized for temporary differences between the carrying amount and tax bases of investments in controlled entities where the Company is able to control the timing of the reversal of the temporary differences and it is probable that the differences will not reverse in the foreseeable future. Deferred tax assets are recognized for deductible temporary differences and unused tax losses only if it is probable that future taxable amounts will be available to utilize those temporary differences and losses. The carrying amount of deferred income tax assets is reviewed at each reporting date and reduced to the extent that it is no longer probable that sufficient taxable profit will be available to allow all or part of the deferred income tax asset to be utilized. Unrecognized deferred income tax assets are reassessed at each balance date and are recognized to the extent that it has become probable that future taxable profit will allow the deferred tax asset to be recovered. Current and deferred tax balances attributable to amounts recognized directly in equity are also recognized directly in equity. Deferred tax assets and deferred tax liabilities are offset only if a legally enforceable right exists to set off current tax assets against tax liabilities and the deferred tax liabilities relate to the same taxable entity and the same taxation authority. Employee Entitlements Provision is made for the Group’s liability for employee benefits arising from services rendered by employees to balance date. Employee benefits that are expected to be settled wholly within 12 months have been measured at the amounts expected to be paid when the liability is settled, plus related on-costs. Earnings per Share Basic EPS is calculated by dividing the net profit attributable to members of the Company for the reporting period, after excluding any costs of servicing equity, by the weighted average number of ordinary shares of the Company, adjusted for any bonus issue. Diluted EPS is calculated by dividing the basic EPS earnings, adjusted by the after tax effect of financing costs associated with dilutive potential Ordinary Shares and the effect on revenues and expenses of conversion to Ordinary Shares associated with dilutive potential Ordinary Shares, by the weighted average number of Ordinary Shares and dilutive Ordinary Shares adjusted for any bonus issue. Diluted earnings per share excludes all dilutive potential shares if their effect is anti-dilutive. 82

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Use and Revision of Accounting Estimates, Judgments and Assumptions The preparation of the financial report requires management to make judgments, estimates and assumptions that affect the application of accounting policies and the reported amounts of assets, liabilities, income and expenses. Actual results may differ from these estimates. The estimates and underlying assumptions are reviewed on an ongoing basis. Revisions to accounting estimates are recognized in the year in which the estimate is revised if the revision affects only that year, or in the year of the revision and future years if the revision affects both current and future years. In particular, information about significant areas of estimation uncertainty and critical judgments in applying accounting policies that have the most significant effect on the amount recognized in the financial statements are described in the following notes: Functional currency (Note 1(e)); Impairment of property plant and equipment (Note 8), intangibles (Note 9) and exploration and evaluation assets (Note 10); Lease accounting (Note 13); and Share-based payments (Note 20). Operating Segments An operating segment is a component of an entity that engages in business activities from which it may earn revenues and incur expenses (including revenues and expenses relating to transactions with other components of the same entity), whose operating results are regularly reviewed by the entity’s chief operating decision maker to make decisions about resources to be allocated to the segment and assess its performance and for which discrete financial information is available. This includes start up operations which are yet to earn revenues. Management will also consider other factors in determining operating segments such as the existence of a line manager and the level of segment information presented reviewed by the chief operating decision maker. Operating segments have been identified based on the information provided to the chief operating decision makers. The Group aggregates two or more operating segments when they have similar economic characteristics, and the segments are similar in each of the following respects: Nature of the products and services; Nature of the production processes; Type or class of customer for the products and services; Methods used to distribute the products or provide the services; and if applicable Nature of the regulatory environment. Operating segments that meet the quantitative criteria as prescribed by AASB 8 are reported separately. However, an operating segment that does not meet the quantitative criteria is still reported separately where information about the segment would be useful to users of the financial statements. Information about other business activities and operating segments that are below the quantitative criteria are combined and disclosed in a separate category for “all other segments”. Currently, the Group has only one operating segment. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 83

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 1. Statement of Material Accounting Policies continued Impairment of Non-Financial Assets The Group assesses at each reporting date whether there is an indication that an asset may be impaired. If any such indication exists, or when annual impairment testing for an asset is required, the Group makes an estimate of the asset’s recoverable amount. An asset’s recoverable amount is the higher of its fair value less costs of disposal and its value in use and is determined for an individual asset, unless the asset does not generate cash inflows that are largely independent of those from other assets or groups of assets and the asset’s value in use cannot be estimated to be close to its fair value. In such cases the asset is tested for impairment as part of the cash-generating unit to which it belongs. When the carrying amount of an asset or cash-generating unit exceeds its recoverable amount, the asset or cash-generating unit is considered impaired and is written down to its recoverable amount. In assessing the value in use, the estimated future cash flows are discounted to their present value using a pre-tax discount rate that reflects current market assessments of the time value of money and the risks specific to the asset. An assessment is also made at each reporting date as to whether there is any indication that previously recognized impairment losses may no longer exist or may have decreased. If such indication exists, the recoverable amount is estimated. A previously recognized impairment loss is reversed only if there has been a change in the estimates used to determine the asset’s recoverable amount since the last impairment loss was recognized. If that is the case the carrying amount of the asset is increased to its recoverable amount. That increased amount cannot exceed the carrying amount that would have been determined, net of depreciation, had no impairment loss been recognized for the asset in prior years. After such a reversal the depreciation charge is adjusted in future years to allocate the asset’s revised carrying amount, less any residual value, on a systematic basis over its remaining useful life. Fair Value Estimation The fair value of financial assets and financial liabilities must be estimated for recognition and measurement or for disclosure purposes. The fair value of financial instruments traded in active markets (such as publicly traded derivatives, and equity securities classified as fair value through other comprehensive income) is based on quoted market prices at the reporting date. The quoted market price used for financial assets held by the Group is the current bid price; the appropriate quoted market price for financial liabilities is the current ask price. The nominal value less estimated credit adjustments of trade receivables and payables are assumed to approximate their fair values. The fair value of financial liabilities for disclosure purposes is estimated by discounting the future contractual cash flows at the current market interest rate that is available to the Group for similar financial instruments. Issued and Unissued Capital Ordinary Shares and Performance Shares are classified as equity. Issued and paid up capital is recognized at the fair value of the consideration received by the Company. Incremental costs directly attributable to the issue of new shares or options are shown in equity as a deduction, net of tax, from the proceeds. Dividends Provision is made for the amount of any dividend declared on or before the end of the year but not distributed at balance date. 84

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Share-Based Payments Equity-settled share-based payments are provided to officers, employees, consultants and other advisors. These share-based payments are measured at the fair value of the equity instrument at the grant date. The fair value of options is estimated using the Black Scholes option valuation model. The fair value of performance rights that have market-based vesting conditions is estimated using a trinomial valuation model. The fair value of restricted stock units and performance rights that do not have market-based vesting conditions are estimated based on the underlying share price. The fair value determined at the grant date is expensed on a straight-line basis over the vesting period, based on the Company’s estimate of equity instruments that will eventually vest. At each reporting date, the Company revises its estimate of the number of equity instruments expected to vest. The impact of the revision of the original estimates, if any, is recognized in profit or loss over the remaining vesting period, with a corresponding adjustment to the share-based payments reserve. Equity-settled share-based payments may also be provided as consideration for the acquisition of assets. Where ordinary shares are issued, the transaction is recorded at fair value based on the quoted price of the ordinary shares at the date of issue. The acquisition is then recorded as an asset or expensed in accordance with accounting standards. Leases The Group assesses at contract inception whether a contract is, or contains, a lease. That is, if the contract conveys the right to control the use of an identified asset for a period of time in exchange for consideration. The Group applies a single recognition and measurement approach for all leases, except for short-term leases and leases of low-value assets. The Group recognizes lease liabilities to make lease payments and right-of-use assets representing the right to use the underlying assets. Right-of-Use Assets The Group recognizes right-of-use assets at the commencement date of the lease (i.e. the date the underlying asset is available for use). Right-of-use assets are measured at cost, less any accumulated depreciation and impairment losses, and adjusted for any remeasurement of lease liabilities. The cost of right-of-use assets includes the amount of lease liabilities recognized, initial direct costs incurred, and lease payments made at or before the commencement date less any lease incentives received. Right-of-use assets are depreciated on a straight-line basis over the shorter of the lease term and the estimated useful lives of the assets. If ownership of the leased asset transfers to the Group at the end of the lease term or the cost reflects the exercise of a purchase option, depreciation is calculated using the estimated useful life of the asset. The right-of-use assets are also subject to impairment. Lease liabilities At the commencement date of the lease, the Group recognizes lease liabilities measured at the present value of lease payments to be made over the lease term. The lease payments include fixed payments (including in-substance fixed payments) less any lease incentives receivable, variable lease payments that depend on an index or a rate, and amounts expected to be paid under residual value guarantees. The lease payments also include the exercise price of a purchase option reasonably certain to be exercised by the Group and payments of penalties for terminating the lease, if the lease term reflects the Group exercising the option to terminate. In calculating the present value of lease payments, the Group uses its incremental borrowing rate at the lease commencement date because the interest rate implicit in the lease is not readily determinable. After the commencement date, the amount of lease liabilities is increased to reflect the accretion of interest and reduced for the lease payments made. In addition, the carrying amount of lease liabilities is remeasured if there is a modification, a change in the lease term, a change in the lease payments (e.g. changes to future payments resulting from a change in an index or rate used to determine such lease payments) or a change in the assessment of an option to purchase the underlying asset. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 85

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 1. Statement of Material Accounting Policies continued (z) Leases continued Short-term Leases and Leases of Low-Value Assets The Group applies the short-term lease recognition exemption to its short-term leases of machinery and equipment (i.e. those leases that have a lease term of 12 months or less from the commencement date and do not contain a purchase option). It also applies the lease of low-value assets recognition exemption to leases of office equipment that are considered to be low value. Lease payments on short-term leases and leases of low-value assets are recognized as expense on a straight-line basis over the lease term. (aa) Accounting for Government Funding Arrangements The U.S. government has invested significant resources to re-shore to the U.S. a secure domestic titanium supply chain. As of June 30, 2025, the Company has received awards under the U.S. DoW DPA and IBAS funding programs in the amount of ~US$60 million, with US$17.7 million obligated as of June 30, 2025 under contract as described below. These contracts are accounted for under IAS 20, Accounting for Government Grants and Disclosure of Government Assistance. Funding under DPA US$12.7 million In October 2023, IperionX executed a US$12.7 million contract in funding under the U.S. DoW DPA Title III authorities to address the U.S. titanium supply chain vulnerabilities. The government share will be matched with US$13.4 million in funding from IperionX, for a total funding amount of US$26 million. This funding is being applied towards the Group’s Titanium Production Facility in Virginia. The agreement has an initial term of 39 months, scheduled to terminate on January 30, 2027, and provides that it may be extended by mutual agreement. Under the agreement, the Company and the U.S. government have agreed to use best efforts to achieve the goals of the agreement, which include the Company conducting a research and development program with respect to titanium technology. Funding under IBAS US$47.1 million In February 2025, the Company was awarded up to US$47.1 million by the U.S. DoW to strengthen the U.S. Defense Industrial Base by accelerating the scale-up of a resilient, low-cost, and fully-integrated U.S. mineral-to-metal titanium supply chain. The grant will be matched with US$23.6 million in funding by IperionX, for a total funding amount of US$70.7 million. This funding aims to bolster the U.S. defense Industrial base by developing a fully integrated, low-cost titanium supply chain sourced domestically. The project scope under the IBAS program had been revised to prioritize accelerated expansion of IperionX’s titanium metal and manufacturing production capacity at IperionX’s Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. As part of the initial phase, the DoW has obligated US$5.0 million, and IperionX will contribute US$1.0 million, to expedite the Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee to ‘shovel-ready’ status, an important milestone in securing a new domestic source of titanium, rare earths and zircon critical minerals. Subsequent to year end, the DoW obligated an additional US$12.5 million in August of 2025, and another US$25.0 million in September of 2025, through the IBAS program to purchase orders for long-lead, major capital equipment required for the next stage of capacity scale-up to over 1,400 metric tons per year at the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus. Total obligations now stand at US$42.5 million, with the remaining US$4.6 million expected to be obligated by the DoW over the contract term. The matching funding by IperionX increased to US$48.1 million for a total funding amount of US$95.2 million as of the date of this filing. Government reimbursements provided as grants are subject to conditional funding provisions. Grants for the initial phase are recognized as “Other income and expenses” in the consolidated statements of profit and loss and other comprehensive income, once all conditions for reimbursement are met. 86

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 2. Income and Expenses Research and development costs Wages and benefits (5,519,763) (3,232,758) Payroll taxes on stock compensation benefits (183,373) (49,118) Depreciation of property, plant and equipment 8 (683,678) (113,224) Amortization of patents 9 (768,128) – Amortization of right-of-use assets 8 (710,678) (427,666) Other operating expenses1 (4,883,353) (4,889,844) (12,748,973) (8,712,610) Corporate and administrative expenses Wages and benefits (4,956,272) (2,047,386) Payroll taxes on stock compensation benefits (994,640) (160,058) Other operating expenses2 (4,735,464) (2,308,949) (10,686,376) (4,516,393) Employee benefits expense Salaries, wages and benefits (14,830,183) (8,831,195) Share-based payment expenses 20 (9,568,191) (3,791,541) (24,398,374) (12,622,736) Finance income Interest income 2,203,220 546,029 Net foreign exchange gain 1,347,413 – 3,550,633 546,029 Finance costs Interest expense (279,541) (122,736) Net foreign exchange loss – (48,588) Other finance costs (26,709) (15,796) (306,250) (187,119) Other income and expenses Other income3 939,412 629,815 Impairment of property, plant and equipment – (198,750) Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment (260,569) (16,353) 678,843 414,712 Note 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Notes: Research and development other operating expenses primarily includes expenses for the R&D facilities, materials, consumables, and consulting fees for continuous technology research. Corporate and administrative other operating expenses primarily includes insurance, legal and other professional fees, ERP system implementation costs and other corporate fees related to operating a public company. Other income includes US$869,928 for government grant income billed to the U.S. DoW under the IBAS program. See Note 1(aa) for additional details. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 87

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 3. Income Tax Recognized in profit or loss Current income tax: Current income tax benefit in respect of the current year Deferred income tax: Origination and reversal of temporary differences – – – – Income tax expense reported in profit or loss – – Reconciliation between tax expense and accounting loss before income tax Accounting loss before income tax (35,348,675) (21,843,646) At the Australian income tax rate of 30% (10,604,603) (6,553,094) Effect of lower income tax rate in the United States 1,032,615 631,007 Expenditure not allowable for income tax purposes 2,885,033 1,427,582 Income not assessable for income tax purposes (404,224) – Exchange differences (639) (2,369) Adjustments in respect of deferred tax of previous years (738,316) 583,422 Effect of deferred tax assets not brought to account 7,830,134 3,913,452 Income tax expense reported in profit or loss – – Deferred tax assets and liabilities Deferred tax liabilities: Right-of-use assets 980,747 414,270 Deferred tax assets used to offset deferred tax liabilities (980,747) (414,270) – – Deferred tax assets: Accrued expenditures 117,578 70,662 Provisions 122,051 75,215 Lease liabilities 1,023,320 383,082 Capital allowances 10,394,779 10,896,126 Tax losses available to offset against future taxable income 9,668,204 1,556,178 Deferred tax assets used to offset deferred tax liabilities (980,747) (414,270) Other deferred tax assets not brought to account1 (20,345,185) (12,566,993) – – 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Notes: 1. The benefit of deferred tax assets not brought to account will only be subsequently recognized if: (a) future assessable income is derived of a nature and of an amount sufficient to enable the benefit to be realized; (b) the conditions for deductibility imposed by tax legislation continue to be complied with; and (c) no changes in tax legislation adversely affect the Group in realizing the benefit. 88

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Dividends Paid or Provided for on Ordinary Shares No dividends have been paid or proposed for the year ended June 30, 2025 (2024:nil) Cash and Cash Equivalents Cash at bank and on hand 54,814,125 33,157,356 Reconciliation of loss before income tax to net cash flows from operations Loss for the year (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Adjustment for non-cash income and expense items Share-based payments expense 9,568,191 3,791,541 Amortization of right-of-use assets 793,981 521,099 Amortization of intangibles 768,128 – Depreciation of property, plant and equipment 716,147 124,752 Net foreign exchange (gain)/loss (1,347,413) 48,588 Loss on disposal of property, plant and equipment 260,569 16,353 Impairment loss – 198,750 Changes in assets and liabilities Receivables and prepayments 1,121,984 (2,073,615) Payables and provisions 1,669,403 609,115 Net cash outflow from operating activities (21,797,685) (18,607,063) 2025 US$ 2024 US$ 6. Trade and Other Receivables Current Receivables from U.S. Government1 Receivables from other third-parties 774,248 49,020 1,655,435 646,575 Total trade and other receivables 823,268 2,302,010 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Notes: 1. See Note 1(aa) for additional details. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 89

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 7. Prepayments Current Blacksand option prepayments1 Construction prepayments Other prepayments — 2,741,220 497,674 5,500,000 – 571,735 Total current prepayments 3,238,894 6,071,735 Non-current Security deposits Other non-current prepayments 438,704 459,031 – – Total non-current prepayments 897,735 – 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Notes: 1. As of June 30, 2024, the Group had an exclusive option to purchase certain assets (including all intellectual property rights) of Blacksand. As consideration for the option, IperionX made option payments to Blacksand totaling US$5,500,000 during the Option Period which represents the prepayments above. During the year ended June 30, 2025, the Group exercised its exclusive option to purchase intellectual property rights. See Note 9 for additional details. 8. Property, Plant and Equipment 2025 Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 6,188,697 1,585,115 7,773,812 Additions 15,996,078 2,961,466 18,957,544 Disposals (23,590) — (23,590) Impairment — — — Depreciation (716,147) (793,981) (1,510,128) Carrying amount at June 30, 2025 21,445,038 3,752,600 25,197,638 – at cost 22,350,584 5,444,538 27,795,122 – accumulated depreciation and impairment (905,546) (1,691,938) (2,597,484) 2024 Carrying amount at June 30, 2023 2,822,765 1,167,018 3,989,783 Additions 5,745,871 939,196 6,685,067 Disposals (2,056,437) — (2,056,437) Impairment (198,750) — (198,750) Depreciation (124,752) (521,099) (645,851) Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 6,188,697 1,585,115 7,773,812 – at cost 6,508,437 2,483,072 8,991,509 – accumulated depreciation and impairment (319,740) (897,957) (1,217,697) Plant and equipment US$ Right-of-use assets US$ Total US$ 90

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 9. Intangibles 2025 Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 – – – Transfers from prepayments1 5,500,000 – 5,500,000 Additions 8,784,368 34,753 8,819,121 Amortization (768,128) – (768,128) Carrying amount at June 30, 2025 13,516,240 34,753 13,550,993 – at cost 14,284,368 34,753 14,319,121 – accumulated amortization (768,128) – (768,128) Blacksands patent US$ Patents and Total intellectual trademarks property rights US$ US$ 2024 Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 – – – Notes: 1. During the period, the Group exercised its exclusive option to purchase intellectual property rights of Blacksand Technology, LLC. The Group now holds the exclusive commercial licensing rights for more than 40 global patents through a license agreement with the University of Utah including the global patents for patented technologies that can produce low-cost and low-carbon titanium metal. As consideration for the option, IperionX has made or will make payments totaling US$14,270,495 (of which US$5,500,000 was paid in prior periods, US$6,616,251 was paid during the twelve months ended June 30, 2025, and US$2,154,244 was payable at June 30, 2025, of which US$1,454,244 was included in trade and other payables and US$700,000 was included in other long-term liabilities). 10. Exploration and Evaluation Assets Carrying amount at July 1, 2024 Additions Write-offs 6,114,061 644,661 (246,396) Carrying amount at June 30, 20251,2 6,512,326 2024 Carrying amount at July 1, 2023 3,059,021 Additions 3,055,040 Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 6,114,061 Titan Project1 US$ 2025 Notes: 1. At June 30, 2025, the Titan Project comprised of approximately 10,083 acres of surface and associated mineral rights in Tennessee prospective for heavy mineral sands, including titanium, rare earth minerals, high grade silica sand, and zircon, of which approximately 1,488 acres are owned by IperionX, approximately 417 acres are subject to long-term lease by IperionX, and approximately 8,178 acres are subject to exclusive option agreements with IperionX. These exclusive option agreements, upon exercise, allow the Group to lease, or in some cases purchase, the surface property and associated mineral rights. 2 The ultimate recoupment of costs carried forward for exploration and evaluation is dependent on the successful development and commercial exploitation or sale of the respective areas of interest. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 91

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 11. Trade and Other Payables Current Trade payables Accruals Other payables 6,004,071 1,307,087 178,239 1,309,067 259,325 749,438 Total trade and other payables 7,489,397 2,317,830 2025 US$ 2024 US$ 12. Loans and Borrowings Carrying amount at July 1, 2024 24,893 1,465,780 1,490,673 Additions – 2,961,565 2,961,565 Repayments (5,826) (511,830) (517,656) Carrying amount at June 30, 2025 19,067 3,915,515 3,934,582 Current 6,764 465,254 472,018 Non-Current 12,303 3,450,261 3,462,564 2024 Carrying amount at July 1, 2023 30,863 944,451 975,314 Additions – 939,195 939,195 Repayments (5,970) (417,866) (423,836) Carrying amount at June 30, 2024 24,893 1,465,780 1,490,673 Current 6,373 439,382 445,755 Non-Current 18,520 1,026,398 1,044,918 Other loans and borrowings US$ Lease liabilities US$ Total loans and borrowings US$ 2025 13. Leases The Group leases office premises, vehicles, and plant and equipment in the United States. No restrictions or covenants are imposed by the leases. The carrying amounts of right-of-use assets (included under property, plant and equipment) and the movements during the year are in Note 8. The carrying amounts of lease liabilities (included under financial liabilities) and the movements during the year are set out in Note 12. 92

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 93 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 13. Leases continued The following are the amounts recognized in profit or loss in respect of leases: Note 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Amortization of right-of-use assets 8 Interest expense on lease liabilities Expense relating to short-term leases and leases of low-value assets (793,981) (278,186) (143,789) (521,099) (106,474) (72,542) Net amount recognized in profit or loss (1,215,956) (700,115) 14. Contributed Equity 2025 2024 Note US$ US$ Issued capital 319,927,854 (2024: 257,244,759) fully paid ordinary shares 14(a) 197,985,920 112,959,638 We do not have a limit on our authorized share capital and the concept of par value is not recognized under Australian law. (a) Movements in Issued Capital Opening balance at July 1, 2024 257,244,759 19,800,000 19,800,000 112,959,638 Issue of shares – share placements 34,951,630 – – 70,919,564 Issue of shares – exercise of options 1,525,000 – – 205,525 Issue of shares – conversion of RSUs 1,639,496 – – 2,094,041 Issue of shares – conversion of rights 24,273,335 – – 13,724,952 Issue of shares – to consultants 151,760 – – 470,262 Issue of shares to Director in lieu of cash bonus 141,844 – – 250,000 Conversion of performance shares 30 (19,800,000) – – Share issue costs – – – (2,638,062) Closing balance at June 30, 2025 319,927,854 – 19,800,000 197,985,920 2024 Opening balance at July 1, 2023 193,493,973 19,800,000 19,800,000 58,764,248 Issue of shares – share placements 43,476,381 – – 45,740,157 Issue of shares – exercise of options 11,231,823 – – 4,335,005 Issue of shares – conversion of RSUs 341,461 – – 225,734 Issue of shares – conversion of rights 5,140,420 – – 2,757,730 Issue of shares to consultants 554,538 – – 470,000 Issue of shares to Blacksand in lieu of cash 3,006,163 – – 2,000,000 Share issue costs – – – (1,333,236) Closing balance at June 30, 2024 257,244,759 19,800,000 19,800,000 112,959,638 Number of ordinary shares Number of Class A performance shares Number of Class B performance shares US$ 2025

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 14. Contributed Equity continued Rights Attaching to Ordinary Shares The rights attaching to fully paid Ordinary Shares arise from a combination of the Company’s Constitution, statute and general law: Shares – The issue of shares in the capital of the Company and options over unissued shares by the Company is under the control of the directors, subject to the Corporations Act 2001, ASX Listing Rules and any rights attached to any special class of shares. Meetings of Members – Directors may call a meeting of members whenever they think fit. Members may call a meeting as provided by the Corporations Act 2001. The Constitution contains provisions prescribing the content requirements of notices of meetings of members and all members are entitled to a notice of meeting. A meeting may be held in two or more places linked together by audio-visual communication devices. A quorum for a meeting of members is two shareholders. The Company holds annual general meetings in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 and the Listing Rules. Voting – Subject to any rights or restrictions at the time being attached to any shares or class of shares of the Company, each member of the Company is entitled to receive notice of, attend and vote at a general meeting. Resolutions of members will be decided by a show of hands unless a poll is demanded. On a show of hands each eligible voter present has one vote. However, where a person present at a general meeting represents personally or by proxy, attorney or representative more than one member, on a show of hands the person is entitled to one vote only despite the number of members the person represents. On a poll each eligible member has one vote for each fully paid share held and a fraction of a vote for each partly paid share determined by the amount paid up on that share. Changes to the Constitution – The Company’s Constitution can only be amended by a special resolution passed by at least three quarters of the members present and voting at a general meeting of the Company. At least 28 days’ written notice specifying the intention to propose the resolution as a special resolution must be given. Listing Rules – Provided the Company remains admitted to the Official List, then despite anything in its Constitution, no act may be done that is prohibited by the Listing Rules, and authority is given for acts required to be done by the Listing Rules. The Company’s Constitution will be deemed to comply with the Listing Rules as amended from time to time. Rights Attaching to Performance Shares Performance Shares comprise of 19,800,000 Class A and 19,800,000 Class B Performance Shares issued in relation to the acquisition of HMAPL and are issued based upon the following terms and conditions: The Performance Shareholders are not entitled to a dividend; The Performance Shares are not transferable; The Performance Shareholders shall have no right to vote, subject to the Corporations Act; The Performance Shares will convert into Ordinary Shares as follows: – Each Class A Performance Share convert into one (1) Ordinary Share upon completion of a positive pre-feasibility study (prepared in accordance with the JORC Code and independently verified by a Competent Person) for heavy mineral sands mining and processing on any of the Titan Project area which demonstrates a net present value of at least A$200,000,000 before September 17, 2024 (the “Pre-Feasibility Study Milestone”). The Pre-Feasibility Study Milestone was not met by September 17, 2024. 94

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Each Class B Performance Share convert into one (1) Ordinary Share upon the commencement of commercial production from the Titan Project area before September 17, 2025 (the “First Production Milestone”). The First Production Milestone was not met by September 17, 2025; All Performance Shares shall automatically convert into Ordinary Shares upon the occurrence of certain change of control events before the applicable expiry date (being December 1, 2024 for the Class A Performance Shares and December 1, 2025 for the Class B Performance Shares); To the extent that any Performance Shares have not converted into Ordinary Shares by the applicable expiry date, (being December 1, 2024 for the Class A Performance Shares and December 1, 2025 for the Class B Performance Shares), all such Performance Shares for each holder will automatically lapse and be combined into 1 single Performance Share that will then convert into 1 single Ordinary Share; The 19,800,000 Class A Performance Shares had not converted into Ordinary Shares by the applicable expiry date of December 1, 2024, so the 19,800,000 Class A Performance Shares converted into 30 Ordinary Shares during fiscal 2025; and If the 19,800,000 Class B Performance Shares have not converted into Ordinary Shares by the applicable expiry date of December 1, 2025, then the 19,800,000 Class B Performance Shares will convert into 30 Ordinary Shares during fiscal 2026. The Ordinary Shares issued on conversion of any Performance Share will rank equally with and confer rights identical with all other Ordinary Shares then on issue and application will be made by the Company to ASX for official quotation of the Ordinary Shares upon the date of conversion. The Company shall allot and issue Ordinary Shares immediately upon conversion of the Performance Shares for no consideration and shall record the allotment and issue in the manner required by the Corporations Act. The Performance Shares are unquoted. No application for quotation of the Performance Shares will be made by the Company. 15. Reserves Share-based payments reserve 15(b) Foreign currency translation reserve 15(f) 6,469,201 (2,780,397) 13,440,265 (1,178,258) 3,688,804 12,262,007 Note 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Nature and Purpose of Reserves Share-Based Payments Reserve The share-based payments reserve is used to record the fair value of Unlisted Options, RSUs and Performance Rights issued by the Group. Foreign Currency Translation Reserve Exchange differences arising on translation of entities whose functional currency is different to the Group’s presentation currency are taken to the foreign currency translation reserve, as described in Note 1(e). Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 95

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 15. Reserves continued (b) Movements in Share-Based Payments Reserve During the Year 2025 Opening balance at July 1, 2024 11,749,372 27,469,335 4,377,034 13,440,265 Grant of employee options, rights and RSUs 2,679,746 5,288,409 2,220,020 – Exercise of options, rights and RSUs (1,525,000) (24,273,335) (1,639,496) (15,818,993) Issue of shares to consultants – – – (470,262) Issue of shares to Director in lieu of bonus – – – (250,000) Lapse/forfeiture of employee rights and RSUs – (980,000) (159,333) – Share-based payment expense – – – 9,568,191 Closing balance at June 30, 2025 12,904,118 7,504,409 4,798,225 6,469,201 2024 Opening balance at July 1, 2023 23,011,372 29,146,000 824,371 15,004,052 Grant of employee rights and RSUs – 4,021,000 3,894,124 – Exercise of options, rights and RSUs (11,262,000) (5,147,665) (341,461) (4,726,904) Issue of shares to consultants – – – (470,000) Expiry of employee rights – (550,000) – (158,424) Share-based payment expense – – – 3,791,541 Closing balance at June 30, 2024 11,749,372 27,469,335 4,377,034 13,440,265 Number of unlisted options (Note 15(c)) Number of performance rights (Note 15(d)) No. of restricted stock units (Note 15(e)) US$ Notes: 1. For details on the valuation of Unlisted Options, Performance Rights and RSUs, including models and assumptions used, refer to Note 20 of the financial statements. Terms and Conditions of Unlisted Options Unlisted Options granted as share-based payments have the following terms and conditions: Each Unlisted Option entitles the holder to the right to subscribe for one share upon the exercise of each Unlisted Option; The Unlisted Options outstanding at the end of the financial year have the following exercise prices and expiry dates: 1,200,000 vendor unlisted options exercisable at A$0.20 each on or before December 1, 2025 (issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021); 4,000,000 vendor Class A performance options exercisable at A$0.20 each on or before December 1, 2025 (issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021); 4,000,000 vendor Class B performance options exercisable at A$0.20 each on or before December 1, 2025 (issued to the original vendors of HMAPL as consideration for the Company’s acquisition of HMAPL in fiscal 2021); 424,372 director options exercisable at A$0.87 each on or before December 5, 2026; 96

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 600,000 director options exercisable at A$1.33 each on or before September 9, 2025; 1,305,000 director options exercisable at A$8.00 each on or before June 30, 2027; and 1,374,746 director options exercisable at A$5.00 each on or before April 10, 2029. The Unlisted Options are exercisable at any time prior to the Expiry Date, subject to vesting conditions being satisfied (if applicable); Shares issued on exercise of the Unlisted Options rank equally with the then Shares of the Company; Application will be made by the Company to ASX for official quotation of the Shares issued upon the exercise of the Unlisted Options; If there is any reconstruction of the issued share capital of the Company, the rights of the Unlisted Option holders may be varied to comply with the ASX Listing Rules which apply to the reconstruction at the time of the reconstruction; and No application for quotation of the Unlisted Options will be made by the Company. Terms and Conditions of Performance Rights Performance Rights granted as share-based payments have the following terms and conditions: Each Performance Right automatically converts into one Share upon vesting of the Performance Right; Each Performance Right is subject to performance conditions (as determined by the Board from time to time) which must be satisfied in order for the Performance Right to vest; The Performance Rights outstanding at the end of the financial year have the following performance conditions and expiry dates: 2,885,000 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$4.00 per share (2,440,000 expiring December 21, 2028 and 445,000 expiring December 31, 2027); 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$6.00 expiring April 10, 2031; 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$7.00 per share expiring April 10, 2031; 1,157,803 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving a 30-day VWAP of A$8.00 per share expiring April 10, 2031; and 1,146,000 employee performance rights that vest upon achieving various (non-market based) performance conditions (271,000 expiring December 22, 2025, 175,000 expiring December 31, 2025, 400,000 expiring April 23, 2026, 275,000 expiring December 22, 2026, and 25,000 expiring December 31, 2026). Application will be made by the Company to ASX for official quotation of the Shares issued upon conversion of the Performance Rights; If there is any reconstruction of the issued share capital of the Company, the rights of the Performance Right holders may be varied to comply with the ASX Listing Rules which apply to the reconstruction at the time of the reconstruction; No application for quotation of the Performance Rights will be made by the Company; and Without approval of the Board, Performance Rights may not be transferred, assigned or novated, except, upon death, a participant’s legal personal representative may elect to be registered as the new holder of such Performance Rights and exercise any rights in respect of them. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 97

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 15. Reserves continued Terms and Conditions of Restricted Stock Units RSUs granted as share-based payments have the following terms and conditions: Each RSU automatically converts into one Share upon vesting of the RSU; Each RSU is subject to service based performance conditions (as determined by the Board from time to time) which must be satisfied in order for the RSU to vest; The RSUs outstanding at the end of the financial year have the following conditions and expiry dates: 141,456 director RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 5, 2026; 270,084 director RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 5, 2027; 1,083,355 director and employee RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 31, 2025; 1,083,330 director and employee RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 31, 2026; 25,132 director RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 31, 2027; 212,430 director RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 16, 2028; 344,483 employee RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring December 31, 2028; and 1,637,975 director and employee RSUs that vest upon achieving various service-based conditions, expiring April 10, 2029. Application will be made by the Company to ASX for official quotation of the Shares issued upon conversion of the RSUs; If there is any reconstruction of the issued share capital of the Company, the rights of the RSU holders may be varied to comply with the ASX Listing Rules which apply to the reconstruction at the time of the reconstruction; No application for quotation of the RSUs will be made by the Company; and Without approval of the Board, RSUs may not be transferred, assigned or novated, except, upon death, a participant’s legal personal representative may elect to be registered as the new holder of such RSUs and exercise any rights in respect of them. (f) Movements in Foreign Currency Translation Reserve During the Year Balance at start of year Exchange differences arising on translation into presentation currency (1,178,258) (1,602,139) (1,008,244) (170,014) Balance at June 30 (2,780,397) (1,178,258) 2025 US$ 2024 US$ 98

Balance at start of year Net loss for the year Adjustment for expiry of employee rights (73,882,050) (35,348,675) – (52,196,828) (21,843,646) 158,424 Balance at June 30 (109,230,725) (73,882,050) Basic loss per share (0.12) (0.10) Diluted loss per share (0.12) (0.10) Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 99 Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 16. Accumulated Losses 2025 US$ 2024 US$ 17. Loss Per Share 2025 US$ 2024 US$ The following reflects the income and share data used in the calculations of basic earnings per share: 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Net loss (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Net loss used in calculating basic and dilutive earnings per share (35,348,675) (21,843,646) Weighted average number of Ordinary Shares used in calculating basic and dilutive earnings per share 296,887,872 217,842,947 Number of Ordinary Shares 2025 Number of Ordinary Shares 2024 Anti-Dilutive Securities As at June 30, 2025, 12,904,118 Unlisted Options, 7,504,409 Performance Rights, 4,798,225 RSUs and 19,800,000 Performance Shares, which together represent 45,006,752 potential Ordinary Shares (2024: 83,195,741), were not included in the calculation of diluted loss per share because they are considered anti-dilutive as they would decrease the loss per share for the years presented. Conversions, Calls, Subscriptions or Issues after June 30, 2025 Subsequent to June 30, 2025, the Company has: issued 13,566,770 ordinary shares pursuant to a placement of ordinary shares; issued 1,716,396 ordinary shares pursuant to the exercise of unlisted options; and issued 165,000 unlisted performance rights to employees and contractors. Other than as above, there have been no other conversions to, calls of, or subscriptions for Ordinary Shares or issues of potential Ordinary Shares since the reporting date and before the completion of this financial report.

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 18. Related Parties (a) Subsidiaries Hyperion Metals (Australia) Pty Ltd Australia 100 100 IperionX Critical Minerals LLC United States 100 100 IperionX Technology LLC United States 100 100 IperionX Inc. United States 100 100 Country of incorporation Equity interest 2025 % 2024 % Ultimate Parent IperionX Limited is the ultimate parent of the Group. Key Management Personnel The aggregate compensation made to KMP of the Group is set out below: Short-term employee benefits Post-employment benefits Share-based payments 4,012,976 62,632 5,496,070 3,100,958 68,300 2,749,346 Total compensation 9,571,678 5,918,604 2025 US$ 2024 US$ No loans were provided to or received from KMP during the year ended June 30, 2025 (2024: nil). Mr. Swan provides services as the Company Secretary through a services agreement with the Apollo Group and was listed as a KMP for fiscal year 2024. During the 2024 financial year, Apollo Group was paid or is payable US$270,763 (A$413,000) for the provision of serviced office facilities and administrative, accounting and company secretarial services to the Group. Mr. Swan ceased to be CFO and KMP effective December 21, 2023. (d) Other Transactions with Related Parties Performance Industries, Inc., a company associated with Mr. Scott Sparks, COO of the Company, was paid US$53,138 during the 2024 (2025: nil) financial year for the provision of engineering and construction services to the Group. The Company considers that the services provided by Performance Industries, Inc. were provided on an arm’s length or better basis. Balances and transactions between the Company and its subsidiaries, which are related parties of the Company, have been eliminated on consolidation and are not disclosed in this note. 100

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 19. Parent Entity Disclosures (a) Financial Position Assets Current Assets Non-Current Assets 52,877,593 40,096,372 30,847,407 21,665,424 Total Assets 92,973,965 52,512,831 Liabilities Current Liabilities 529,966 1,173,236 Total Liabilities 529,966 1,173,236 Equity Contributed equity Reserves Accumulated losses 197,985,920 1,900,687 (107,442,608) 112,959,638 10,836,448 (72,456,491) Total Equity 92,443,999 51,339,595 2025 US$ 2024 US$ (b) Financial Performance Loss for the year Other comprehensive (loss) (33,021,422) (1,964,695) (21,862,933) 7,697 Total comprehensive loss (34,986,117) (21,855,236) 2025 US$ 2024 US$ (c) Other No guarantees have been entered into by the parent entity in relation to its subsidiaries. Refer to Note 24 for details of contingent assets and liabilities. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 101

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 20. Share-Based Payments (a) Recognized Share-Based Payment Expense From time to time, the Group grants ordinary shares, unlisted options, performance rights, and RSUs to officers, employees, consultants and other key advisors as part of remuneration and incentive arrangements. The number of Shares, Options, Rights, and RSUs granted, and the terms of the Shares, Options, Rights, and RSUs granted are determined by the Board. Shareholder approval is sought where required. During fiscal 2025 and 2024 the following equity-settled share-based payments have been recognized in profit or loss: Expense arising from staff remuneration arrangements (9,568,191) (3,791,541) Total expense arising from equity-settled share-based payment transactions (9,568,191) (3,791,541) 2025 US$ 2024 US$ In addition to share-based payment expenses recognized through profit or loss, a share-based payment of US$2,000,000 was recognized as an asset (prepayments) during the 2024 financial year, relating to the issue of 3,006,163 new fully paid ordinary shares to nominees of Blacksand in lieu of future cash option payments totaling US$2,000,000 owed to Blacksand under the option agreement between the Company and Blacksand. (b) Summary of Securities Granted as Share-Based Payments The following table illustrates the number and weighted-average exercise price of Options, and weighted-average grant date fair value for Rights and RSUs granted as share-based payments during fiscal 2025, and fiscal 2024: June 30, 2024 11,749,372 0.28 4,377,034 2.04 25,613,335 0.74 Granted 2,679,746 6.46 2,220,020 3.99 4,938,409 3.49 Exercised/Converted (1,525,000) (0.20) (1,639,496) (1.93) (23,273,335) (0.79) Forfeited – – (159,333) (2.27) (920,000) (0.98) June
30, 2025 12,904,118 1.57 4,798,225 2.97 6,358,409 2.66 Stock option awards WA – exercise price A$ Restricted stock units WA – grant date fair value A$ Performance rights awards \(market-based conditions\) WA – grant date fair
value A$ June 30, 2023 23,011,372 0.32 824,371 0.95 26,910,000 0.69 Granted – – 3,894,124 2.18 3,980,000 0.99 Exercised/Converted \(11,262,000\) \(0.35\) \(341,461\) \(0.99\) \(4,726,665\) \(0.71\) Forfeited
– – – – \(550,000\) \(0.66\) 102

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued The following Options, Rights and RSUs were granted as share-based payments during fiscal 2025,and fiscal 2024: Series 1 Rights 445,000 1-Nov-24 31-Dec-27 – 4.00 2.98 Series 2 Rights 435,000 1-Nov-24 23-Apr-26 – 3.00 3.12 Series 3 Rights 585,000 1-Nov-24 23-Apr-26 – 4.00 2.53 Series 4 Rights 30,000 1-Nov-24 31-Dec-25 – – 3.40 Series 5 Rights 200,000 1-Nov-24 23-Apr-26 – – 3.40 Series 6 RSUs 25,132 1-Nov-24 31-Dec-27 – – 3.40 Series 7 RSUs 169,944 22-Nov-24 16-Dec-28 – – 4.40 Series 8 Rights 120,000 20-Dec-24 31-Dec-25 – – 4.60 Series 9 RSUs 42,486 9-Mar-25 16-Dec-28 – – 3.37 Series 10 RSUs 40,000 6-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.49 Series 11 RSUs 113,475 8-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.40 Series 12 RSUs 56,738 9-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.55 Series 13 RSUs 82,335 10-May-25 10-Apr-29 – – 3.55 Series 14 Options 216,672 10-May-25 10-Apr-29 5.00 – 1.87 Series 15 RSUs 13,617 12-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.41 Series 16 RSUs 8,511 13-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.17 Series 17 RSUs 400,533 15-May-25 10-Apr-29 – – 3.11 Series 18 Rights 415,695 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 – 6.00 2.76 Series 19 Rights 415,695 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 – 7.00 2.68 Series 20 Rights 415,695 15-May-25 10-Apr-31 – 8.00 2.60 Series 21 RSUs 48,227 16-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.20 Series 22 RSUs 82,335 23-May-25 10-Apr-29 – – 3.55 Series 23 Options 216,672 23-May-25 10-Apr-29 5.00 – 1.86 Series 24 RSUs 24,823 29-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.58 Series 25 RSUs 9,362 30-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.69 Series 26 RSUs 26,326 31-May-25 31-Dec-28 – – 3.69 Series 27 RSUs 357,732 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 – – 4.10 Series 28 Options 941,402 12-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 5.00 – 2.26 Series 29 RSUs 3,404 12-Jun-25 31-Dec-28 – – 4.10 Series 30 Options 1,305,000 26-Jun-25 30-Jun-27 8.00 – 1.09 Series 31 RSUs 715,040 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-29 – – 4.75 Series 32 Rights 742,108 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 – 6.00 4.48 Series 33 Rights 742,108 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 – 7.00 4.38 Series 34 Rights 742,108 27-Jun-25 10-Apr-31 – 8.00 4.29 Exercise Vesting hurdle Fair Security price (30-day VWAP) value 2025 type Number Grant date Expiry date A$ A$ A$ Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 103

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 2024 Security type Number Grant date Expiry date Exercise price A$ Vesting hurdle (30-day VWAP) A$ Fair value A$ Series 1 Shares 116,538 15-Aug-23 – – – 0.98 Series 2 Rights 21,000 15-Aug-23 22-Dec-24 – – 1.10 Series 3 Rights 10,000 15-Aug-23 22-Dec-25 – – 1.10 Series 4 Rights 10,000 15-Aug-23 22-Dec-26 – – 1.10 Series 5 Rights 200,000 18-Dec-23 23-Apr-26 – 3.00 0.79 Series 6 Rights 300,000 18-Dec-23 23-Apr-26 – 4.00 0.63 Series 7 Rights 3,330,000 18-Dec-23 21-Dec-28 – 4.00 1.01 Series 8 Shares 388,000 30-Jan-24 – – – 1.37 Series 9 Shares 50,000 30-Jan-24 -– – – 1.37 Series 10 RSUs 1,434,000 26-Mar-24 31-Dec-27 – – 2.27 Series 11 RSUs 2,055,000 9-Apr-24 31-Dec-27 – – 2.27 Series 12 RSUs 405,124 22-Nov-23 5-Dec-27 – – 1.42 Series 13 Rights 75,000 21-May-24 23-Apr-26 – 3.00 1.61 Series 14 Rights 75,000 21-May-24 23-Apr-26 – 4.00 1.32 Weighted Average Remaining Contractual Life At June 30, 2025, the weighted average remaining contractual life of Unlisted Options was 0.96 years (2024: 1.45 years). Option, Right and RSU Pricing Models The fair value of granted RSUs and Rights that do not have market-based vesting conditions are estimated as at the date of grant based on the underlying share price. The fair value of granted Options is estimated as at the date of grant using the Black Scholes option valuation model taking into account the terms and conditions upon which the Unlisted Options were granted. The table below list the inputs to the valuation models used for Options granted by the Group during fiscal 2025, and fiscal 2024: 2025 2024 Expected life (weighted average) 2.96 years – Risk-free interest rate (weighted average) 3% –% Expected volatility (weighted average) 80% –% Expected dividend yield –% –% 20. Share-Based Payments continued (b) Summary of Securities Granted as Share-Based Payments continued 104

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued The fair value of granted Rights that have market-based vesting conditions is estimated as at the date of grant using a trinomial valuation model taking into account the market-based vesting criteria upon which the Rights were granted. The table below list the inputs to the valuation models used for the Rights that have market-based vesting conditions granted by the Group during fiscal 2025, and fiscal 2024: 2025 2024 Expected life (weighted average) 4.69 years 4.56 years Risk-free interest rate (weighted average) 3.73% 3.75% Expected volatility (weighted average) 77% 80% Fair value at grant date (weighted average) A$3.49 A$0.99 Share price at grant date (weighted average) A$3.94 A$1.36 Vesting hurdle (30-day VWAP) (weighted average) A$6.02 A$3.93 21. Auditors’ Remuneration PwC and related network firms: Audit or review of financial reports – Group 400,000 270,955 400,000 270,955 2025 US$ 2024 US$ 22. Segment Information AASB 8 requires operating segments to be identified on the basis of internal reports about components of the Consolidated Entity that are regularly reviewed by the chief operating decision maker in order to allocate resources to the segment and to assess its performance. The Consolidated Entity operates in one segment, being exploration and evaluation of mineral properties in the U.S. and research and development of associated metals technologies to support an integrated titanium processing operation. (a) Reconciliation of non-current assets by geographical location United States of America 45,719,988 13,887,873 45,719,988 13,887,873 2025 US$ 2024 US$ Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 105

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Financial Risk Management Objectives and Policies Overview The Group’s principal financial instruments comprise cash, receivables, other financial assets, payables, loans and borrowings and lease liabilities. The main risks arising from the Group’s financial instruments are interest rate risk, foreign currency risk, credit risk and liquidity risk. The Group manages its exposure to key financial risks in accordance with the Group’s financial risk management policy. Key risks are monitored and reviewed as circumstances change and policies are revised as required. The overall objective of the Group’s financial risk management policy is to support the delivery of the Group’s financial targets whilst protecting future financial security. Given the nature and size of the business and uncertainty as to the timing and amount of cash inflows and outflows, the Group does not enter into derivative transactions to mitigate the financial risks. In addition, the Group’s policy is that no trading in financial instruments shall be undertaken for the purposes of making speculative gains. As the Group’s operations change, the Directors will review this policy periodically going forward. The Board of Directors has overall responsibility for the establishment and oversight of the risk management framework. The Board reviews and agrees policies for managing the Group’s financial risks as summarized below. Credit Risk Credit risk is the risk of financial loss to the Group if a customer or counterparty to a financial instrument fails to meet its contractual obligations. This arises principally from cash and cash equivalents, receivables, and other financial assets. There are no significant concentrations of credit risk within the Group. The carrying amount of the Group’s financial assets represents the maximum credit risk exposure, as represented below: Cash and cash equivalents 5 Trade and other receivables 6.00 54,814,125 823,268 33,157,356 2,302,010 55,637,393 35,459,366 Note 2025 US$ 2024 US$ With respect to credit risk arising from cash and cash equivalents, the Group’s exposure arises from default of the counter party, with a maximum exposure equal to the carrying amount of these instruments. The credit risk for cash and cash equivalents is considered negligible, since the counterparties are reputable banks with high quality external credit ratings. Trade and other receivables comprise primarily deposits, accrued interest and GST refunds due. Where possible the Group trades only with recognized, creditworthy third parties. It is the Group’s policy that all customers who wish to trade on credit terms are subject to credit verification procedures. In addition, receivable balances are monitored on an ongoing basis with the result that the Group’s exposure to bad debts is not significant. There were no past due receivables at the date of this report. 106

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued (c) Liquidity Risk Liquidity risk is the risk that the Group will not be able to meet its financial obligations as they fall due. The Board’s approach to managing liquidity is to ensure, as far as possible, that the Group will always have sufficient liquidity to meet its liabilities when due. At June 30, 2025, the Group had sufficient liquid assets to meet its financial obligations. The Group had no financial covenants during the 2025 and 2024 financial periods, as the Group’s lease liabilities and other loans and borrowings do not impose any financial covenants other than the security interests in the leased assets that are held by the lessor. Leased assets may not be used as security for borrowing purposes. The contractual maturities of financial liabilities, including estimated interest payments, are provided below. There are no netting arrangements in respect of financial liabilities. 2025 Financial liabilities Trade and other payables Lease liabilities Other loans and borrowings 7,489,397 465,254 6,764 – 1,425,380 12,303 – 2,024,881 – 7,489,397 3,915,515 19,067 7,489,397 3,915,515 19,067 7,961,415 1,437,683 2,024,881 11,423,979 11,423,979 2024 Financial liabilities Trade and other payables 2,317,830 – – 2,317,830 2,317,830 Lease liabilities 439,382 1,336,962 – 1,776,344 1,465,780 Other loans and borrowings 6,373 20,117 – 26,490 24,893 2,763,585 1,357,079 – 4,120,664 3,808,503 ≤1 year US$ 1-5 years US$ ≥5 years US$ Total contractual cash flows US$ Carrying amount of liabilities US$ (d) Interest Rate Risk The Group’s exposure to the risk of changes in market interest rates relates primarily to the cash and short-term deposits with a floating interest rate. These financial assets with variable rates expose the Group to cash flow interest rate risk. All other financial assets and liabilities are either non-interest bearing (for example, receivables and payables) or have fixed interest rates (for example, lease liabilities, sub-lease receivables, and loans and borrowings). At the reporting date, the interest rate profile of the Group’s financial instruments was: Interest-bearing financial instruments Cash at bank and on hand 5 54,814,125 33,157,356 54,814,125 33,157,356 Note 2025 US$ 2024 US$ The Group’s cash at bank and on hand and short-term deposits had a weighted average floating interest rate at year end of 3.48% (2024: 4.16%). The Group currently does not engage in any hedging or derivative transactions to manage interest rate risk. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 107

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued 23. Financial Risk Management Objectives and Policies continued (d) Interest Rate Risk continued Interest Rate Sensitivity A sensitivity of 0.5% (50 basis points) has been selected as this is considered reasonable given the current level of both short-term and long-term interest rates. A 0.5% (50 basis points) movement in interest rates at the reporting date would have increased (decreased) equity and profit or loss by the amounts shown below. This analysis assumes that all other variables, in particular foreign currency rates, remain constant. Profit or loss Equity +0.5% US$ –0.5% US$ +0.5% US$ –0.5% US$ 2025 Cash and cash equivalents 274,071 (274,071) 274,071 (274,071) 2024 Cash and cash equivalents 165,787 (165,787) 165,787 (165,787) (e) Foreign Currency Risk Foreign currency risk is the risk that the fair value of future cash outflows will fluctuate because of changes in foreign currency exchange rates. The Group’s exposure to the risk of changes in foreign exchange rate relates primarily to assets and liabilities that are denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the group entity. The Company’s functional currency is Australian dollars. The financial statements are presented in United States dollars which is the Group’s presentation currency. The Group also has transactional currency exposures relating to transactions denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the entity. It is the Group’s policy not to enter into any hedging or derivative transactions to manage foreign currency risk. At the reporting date, the Group’s exposure to financial instruments denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the group entity: Financial assets Cash and cash equivalents 29,417,896 25,268,133 Financial liabilities Trade and other payables (1,130,814) (256,267) Net exposure 28,287,082 25,011,866 Assets and liabilities denominated in currencies other than the functional currency of the group entity 2025 US$ equivalent 2024 US$ equivalent 108

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Foreign Exchange Rate Sensitivity At the reporting date, had the US$ appreciated or depreciated against the A$, as illustrated in the table below, profit or loss and equity would have been affected by the amounts shown below. This analysis assumes that all other variables remain constant. Profit or loss Equity +10% US$ –10% US$ +10% US$ –10% US$ 2025 Group 2,828,708 (2,828,708) 2,828,708 (2,828,708) 2024 Group 2,501,186 (2,501,186) 2,501,186 (2,501,186) Commodity Price Risk The Group’s major commodity price exposure is to the price of titanium and titanium products. The price of titanium is affected by numerous factors beyond the control of the Group. The Group is currently researching, developing and commercializing its titanium metal technologies and exploring its mineral properties in the United States. To date, the Group has not had significant sales of titanium and titanium products, but anticipates product sales now that the Group’s Titanium Manufacturing Campus in Virginia has been fully commissioned and started operations. We currently do not enter into hedging or derivative transactions to manage commodity price risk. Capital Management The Board’s policy is to maintain a strong capital base so as to maintain investor, creditor and market confidence and to sustain future development of the business. Given the stage of development of the Group, the Board’s objective is to minimize debt and to raise funds as required through the issue of new shares. The Group is not subject to externally imposed capital requirements. There were no changes in the Group’s approach to capital management during the year. Fair Value The fair value of financial assets and financial liabilities approximates their carrying value. The methods for estimating fair value are outlined in the relevant notes to the consolidated financial statements. Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements 109

Notes to the Consolidated Financial Statements continued Contingent Assets and Liabilities Titan Project The Titan Project is prospective for critical mineral sands including titanium minerals, rare earth minerals, high grade silica sand and zircon minerals. At June 30, 2025, the Group had entered into exclusive option agreements with local landowners in Tennessee, in relation to its Titan Project, which upon exercise, allows the Group to lease or, in some cases purchase, the acres of surface property and the associated mineral rights from the local landowners. As of June 30, 2025, the Titan Project comprised approximately 10,083 acres of surface and associated mineral rights in Tennessee, of which approximately 1,488 acres are owned by IperionX, approximately 417 acres are subject to long-term lease by IperionX, and approximately 8,178 acres are subject to exclusive option agreements with IperionX. During the option period, our option agreements provide us with exclusive right to access, enter, occupy and use the surface property for all purposes related to exploring for and evaluating all minerals in return for making annual option payments and bonus payments during periods when we conduct drilling. Upon exercise, in the case of an option to lease, the Company will pay a production royalty to the landowners, subject to a minimum royalty. Upon exercise, in the case of a purchase, the Company will pay cash consideration approximating the fair market value of the property, excluding the value of any minerals, plus a premium. Events Subsequent to Balance Date On July 29th, 2025, the Company completed the placement of 14 million new fully paid ordinary shares at A$5.00 per share, to raise gross proceeds of A$70 million (approximately US$46 million) before costs. The Placement positioned IperionX to capitalize on the United States’ demand for a reliable source of titanium metal – particularly for defense, aerospace and advanced manufacturing applications. Expediting the orders for long-lead capital items shortens the construction schedule for planned scale-up in titanium production capacity and underpins ongoing engagement with the U.S. DoW. On August 26, 2025, the Company announced that the U.S. DoW had obligated US$12.5 million under IperionX’s previously announced US$47 million award to strengthen the U.S. Defense Industrial Base by accelerating the scale-up of a resilient, low-cost, and fully-integrated U.S. mineral-to-metal titanium supply chain. The US$12.5 million was applied to purchase orders for long-lead, major capital equipment required for the next stage of capacity scale-up to over 1,400 metric tons per year at the Virginia Titanium Manufacturing Campus; and On September 26, 2025, the Company announced that the DoW obligated an additional US$25.0 million under IperionX’s previously announced US$47.1 million award bringing the total obligated award to $42.5 million, with the remaining $4.6 million to be obligated through the end of the contract term. Other than the above, as at the date of this report there are no other matters or circumstances which have arisen since June 30, 2025 that have significantly affected or may significantly affect: the operations, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group; the results of those operations, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group; or the state of affairs, in financial years subsequent to June 30, 2025, of the Group. 110

Consolidated Entity Disclosure Statement As at June 30, 2025 Entity name Entity type Place of incorporation % of share capital Australian resident or foreign resident Foreign jurisdiction(s) of foreign residents IperionX Ltd Body corporate Australia Not applicable Australia N/A Hyperion Metals (Australia) Pty Ltd Body corporate Australia 100% Australia N/A IperionX Critical Minerals LLC Body corporate United States 100% Foreign United States IperionX Technology LLC Body corporate United States 100% Foreign United States IperionX Inc. Body corporate United States 100% Foreign United States Basis of Preparation This consolidated entity disclosure statement has been prepared in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001 and includes information for each entity that was part of the consolidated entity as at the end of the financial year in accordance with AASB 10 Consolidated Financial Statements. Determination of Tax Residency Section 295 (3A)(vi) of the Corporations Act 2001 defines tax residency as having the meaning in the Income Tax Assessment Act 1997. The determination of tax residency involves judgment as there are different interpretations that could be adopted, and that could give rise to a different conclusion on residency. In determining tax residency, the consolidated entity has applied the following interpretations: Australian tax residency: the consolidated entity has applied current legislation and judicial precedent, including having regard to the Tax Commissioner’s public guidance in Tax Ruling 2018/5; and Foreign tax residency: where necessary, the consolidated entity has used independent tax advisers in foreign jurisdictions to assist in its determination of tax residency to ensure applicable foreign tax legislation has been complied with (see section 295(3A)(vii) of the Corporations Act 2001). Consolidated Entity Disclosure Statement 111

Directors’ Declaration In accordance with a resolution of the directors of IperionX Limited: In the opinion of the directors: the attached financial statements, notes and the additional disclosures included in the directors’ report designated as audited, are in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001, including: compliance with accounting standards and Corporations Regulations 2001; and giving a true and fair view of the consolidated entity’s financial position as at 30 June 2025 and of its performance for the financial year ended on that date; and there are reasonable grounds to believe that the Company will be able to pay its debts as and when they become due and payable; and the consolidated entity disclosure statement required by section 295(3A) of the Corporations Act 2001 is true and correct. The attached financial statements are in compliance with International Financial Reporting Standards as issued by the International Accounting Standards Board, as stated in note 1 to the financial statements. The Directors have been given the declarations required by section 295A of the Corporations Act 2001 for the financial year ended 30 June 2025. On behalf of the Board Anastasios Arima CEO and Managing Director September 30, 2025 112

Independent auditor’s report To the members of IperionX Limited Report on the audit of the financial report Our opinion In our opinion: The accompanying financial report of IperionX Limited (the Company) and its controlled entities (together the Group) is in accordance with the Corporations Act 2001, including: giving a true and fair view of the Group's financial position as at 30 June 2025 and of its financial performance for the year then ended complying with Australian Accounting Standards and the Corporations Regulations 2001. What we have audited The financial report comprises: the consolidated statement of financial position as at 30 June 2025 the consolidated statement of changes in equity for the year then ended the consolidated statement of cash flows for the year then ended the consolidated statement of profit or loss and other comprehensive income for the year then ended the notes to the consolidated financial statements, including material accounting policy information and other explanatory information the consolidated entity disclosure statement as at 30 June 2025 the directors’ declaration. PricewaterhouseCoopers, ABN 52 780 433 757 Brookfield Place, Level 15, 125 St Georges Terrace, PERTH WA 6000, GPO Box D198, PERTH WA 6840 T: +61 8 9238 3000, F: +61 8 9238 3999, www.pwc.com.au pwc.com.au Liability limited by a scheme approved under Professional Standards Legislation. Independent Auditor’s Report To the Members of IperionX Limited Independent Auditor’s Report 113

Independent Auditor’s Report continued [remove or insert page no’s to match accounts] Basis for opinion We conducted our audit in accordance with Australian Auditing Standards. Our responsibilities under those standards are further described in the Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial report section of our report. We believe that the audit evidence we have obtained is sufficient and appropriate to provide a basis for our opinion. Independence We are independent of the Group in accordance with the auditor independence requirements of the Corporations Act 2001 and the ethical requirements of the Accounting Professional & Ethical Standards Board’s APES 110 Code of Ethics for Professional Accountants (including Independence Standards) (the Code) that are relevant to our audit of the financial report in Australia. We have also fulfilled our other ethical responsibilities in accordance with the Code. Our audit approach An audit is designed to provide reasonable assurance about whether the financial report is free from material misstatement. Misstatements may arise due to fraud or error. They are considered material if individually or in aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial report. We tailored the scope of our audit to ensure that we performed enough work to be able to give an opinion on the financial report as a whole, taking into account the geographic and management structure of the Group, its accounting processes and controls and the industry in which it operates. Audit Scope Our audit focused on where the Group made subjective judgements; for example, significant accounting estimates involving assumptions and inherently uncertain future events. - In establishing the overall approach to the group audit, we determined the type of work that needed to be performed by us, as the group auditor. 114

Independent Auditor’s Report continued [remove or insert page no’s to match accounts] Key audit matter How our audit addressed the key audit matter Key audit matters Key audit matters are those matters that, in our professional judgement, were of most significance in our audit of the financial report for the current period. The key audit matters were addressed in the context of our audit of the financial report as a whole, and in forming our opinion thereon, and we do not provide a separate opinion on these matters. Further, any commentary on the outcomes of a particular audit procedure is made in that context. We communicated the key audit matter to the Audit and Risk Committee. Valuation of share-based payments As described in Notes 1(y) and 20 to the financial report, the Group recognised share-based payment expenses of $9.6 million for the year ended 30 June 2025. The share-based payments are measured by the Group at fair value using valuation models that involved the use of significant assumptions including risk-free interest rate and share price volatility. The principal considerations for our determination that performing procedures relating to the valuation of share-based payments is a key audit matter are: III. the significant judgement applied by the Group, including the use of the Group’s expert, in determining the fair value of the share- based payments; a high degree of auditor judgement, subjectivity and effort in performing procedures and evaluating audit evidence related to the Group’s (a) valuation models and (b) significant assumptions related to risk-free interest rate and share price volatility; and the audit effort involved the use of professionals with specialised skill and knowledge. We performed the following procedures, amongst others: testing the Group’s process for determining the fair value of the share-based payments; testing the completeness and accuracy of the underlying data used in the estimate; evaluating the work of the Group’s expert involved in the determination of significant judgements and assumptions; involving professionals with specialised skill and knowledge to assist in evaluating the appropriateness of the Group’s valuation models and certain significant assumptions; and evaluating the disclosures made regarding the share-based payment expenses recognised in the financial report against the requirements of Australian Accounting Standards. Independent Auditor’s Report 115

Independent Auditor’s Report continued [remove or insert page no’s to match accounts] Other information The directors are responsible for the other information. The other information comprises the information included in the annual report for the year ended 30 June 2025, but does not include the financial report and our auditor’s report thereon. Our opinion on the financial report does not cover the other information and accordingly we do not express any form of assurance conclusion thereon through our opinion on the financial report. We have issued a separate opinion on the remuneration report. In connection with our audit of the financial report, our responsibility is to read the other information and, in doing so, consider whether the other information is materially inconsistent with the financial report or our knowledge obtained in the audit, or otherwise appears to be materially misstated. If, based on the work we have performed on the other information that we obtained prior to the date of this auditor’s report, we conclude that there is a material misstatement of this other information, we are required to report that fact. We have nothing to report in this regard. Responsibilities of the directors for the financial report The directors of the Company are responsible for the preparation of the financial report in accordance with Australian Accounting Standards and the Corporations Act 2001, including giving a true and fair view, and for such internal control as the directors determine is necessary to enable the preparation of the financial report that is free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error. In preparing the financial report, the directors are responsible for assessing the ability of the Group to continue as a going concern, disclosing, as applicable, matters related to going concern and using the going concern basis of accounting unless the directors either intend to liquidate the Group or to cease operations, or have no realistic alternative but to do so. Auditor’s responsibilities for the audit of the financial report Our objectives are to obtain reasonable assurance about whether the financial report as a whole is free from material misstatement, whether due to fraud or error, and to issue an auditor’s report that includes our opinion. Reasonable assurance is a high level of assurance, but is not a guarantee that an audit conducted in accordance with the Australian Auditing Standards will always detect a material misstatement when it exists. Misstatements can arise from fraud or error and are considered material if, 116

Independent Auditor’s Report continued [remove or insert page no’s to match accounts] individually or in the aggregate, they could reasonably be expected to influence the economic decisions of users taken on the basis of the financial report. A further description of our responsibilities for the audit of the financial report is located at the Auditing and Assurance Standards Board website at: https://auasb.gov.au/media/bwvjcgre/ar1_2024.pdf. This description forms part of our auditor's report. Report on the remuneration report Our opinion on the remuneration report We have audited the remuneration report included in the directors’ report for the year ended 30 June 2025. In our opinion, the remuneration report of IperionX Limited for the year ended 30 June 2025 complies with section 300A of the Corporations Act 2001. Responsibilities The directors of the Company are responsible for the preparation and presentation of the remuneration report in accordance with section 300A of the Corporations Act 2001. Our responsibility is to express an opinion on the remuneration report, based on our audit conducted in accordance with Australian Auditing Standards. PricewaterhouseCoopers Craig Heatley Partner Perth 30 September 2025 Independent Auditor’s Report 117

Mineral Resources Statement Summary of Mineral Resources The Company’s Mineral Resources as at 30 June 2025 and 2024, reported in accordance with the 2012 Edition of the JORC Code, are as follows (stated in metric tons): Titan Project Mineral Resources THM Assemblage Indicated Inferred 0.4 0.4 241 190 2.2 2.2 5.3 4.2 11.3 11.7 9.3 9.7 39.7 41.2 2.1 2.2 15.6 13.7 Total 0.4 431 2.2 9.5 11.5 9.5 40.3 2.1 14.8 As at 30 June 2024 Indicated 0.4 241 2.2 5.3 11.3 9.3 39.7 2.1 15.6 Inferred 0.4 190 2.2 4.2 11.7 9.7 41.2 2.2 13.7 Total 0.4 431 2.2 9.5 11.5 9.5 40.3 2.1 14.8 Cut off grade Material Tons THM grade THM Tons Zircon Rutile Ilmenite REE Staurlite Mineral resource category (THM %) (Mt) (%) (Mt) (%) (%) (%) (%) (%) As at 30 June 2025 Annual Review of Mineral Resources As a result of the annual review of the Company’s Mineral Resources, there has been no change to the Mineral Resources reported for the Titan Project. Governance of Mineral Resources The Company engages external consultants and competent persons (as determined pursuant to the JORC Code) to prepare and calculate estimates of its Mineral Resources. Management and the Board review these estimates and underlying assumptions for reasonableness and accuracy. The results of the Mineral Resource estimates are then reported in accordance with the requirements of the JORC Code and other applicable rules (including ASX Listing Rules). Where material changes occur during the year to a project, including the project’s size, title, exploration results or other technical information then previous resource estimates and market disclosures are reviewed for completeness. The Company reviews its Mineral Resources as at June 30 each year. Where a material change has occurred in the assumptions or data used in previously reported Mineral Resources, then where possible a revised Mineral Resource estimate will be prepared as part of the annual review process. However, there are circumstances where this may not be possible (e.g. an ongoing drilling program), in which case a revised Mineral Resource Estimate will be prepared and reported as soon as practicable. Competent Person Statement The information in this Mineral Resources Statement that relates to Mineral Resources is based on, and fairly represents, information and supporting documentation compiled by Mr. Adam Karst, P.G., who is a Competent Person. Mr. Karst is an independent consultant to IperionX Limited. Mr. Karst is a Registered Member of the Society of Mining, Metallurgy and Exploration which is a Recognized Overseas Professional Organization as well as a Professional Geologist in the state of Tennessee. Mr. Karst has sufficient experience that is relevant to the style of mineralization and type of deposit under consideration and to the activity being undertaken to qualify as a Competent Person as defined in the 2012 Edition of the ‘Australasian Code for Reporting of Exploration Results, Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves’. Mr. Karst approves and consents to the inclusion in the Mineral Resources Statement of the matters based on his information in the form and context in which it appears. 118

Corporate Governance IperionX Limited (IperionX or Company) and the entities it controls believe corporate governance is important for the Company in conducting its business activities. The Board has adopted a suite of charters and key corporate governance documents which articulate the policies and procedures followed by IperionX. These documents are available in the Governance section of the Company’s website, www.iperionx.com. These documents are reviewed at least annually to address any changes in governance practices and the law. This Corporate Governance Statement (Statement), which is current at June 30, 2025 and has been approved by the Company’s Board, explains how IperionX complies with the ASX Corporate Governance Council’s ‘Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations – 4th Edition’ (ASX Principles and Recommendations), which were published on in February 2019 in relation to the year ended June 30, 2025. Since the Company listed on Nasdaq in June 2022, it must also comply with the rules and laws applicable to a Foreign Private Issuer in the United States. The sources of these rules and laws are principally the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and Nasdaq. In addition to the ASX Corporate Governance Council’s ‘Corporate Governance Principles and Recommendations – 4th Edition’ and applicable U.S. rules, the Board has taken into account a number of important factors in determining its corporate governance policies and procedures, including the: relatively early-stage production of titanium metal powders and parts; cost versus benefit of additional corporate governance requirements or processes; Board’s experience in the manufacturing and mineral resources sectors; organizational reporting structure and number of reporting functions, operational divisions and employees; financial affairs with limited complexity and quantum; and direct shareholder feedback. Corporate Governance 119

ASX Additional Information The shareholder information set out below was applicable as at August 31, 2025. 1. Twenty Largest Holders of Listed Securities The names of the twenty largest holders of listed securities are listed below: Name No. of ordinary shares held Percentage of issued shares HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited 135,071,996 40.5% Citicorp Nominees Pty Limited 28,229,102 8.5% J P Morgan Nominees Australia Pty Limited 19,703,207 5.9% BNP Paribas Nominees Pty Ltd <Clearstream> 12,182,603 3.6% BNP Paribas Noms Pty Ltd 8,956,613 2.7% UBS Nominees Pty Ltd 6,026,633 1.8% Arredo Pty Ltd 4,650,001 1.4% Mr James Fisher McDonald 4,002,144 1.2% BNP Paribas Nominees Pty Ltd <IB Au Noms Retailclient> 3,941,330 1.2% UBS Nominees Pty Ltd 3,891,429 1.2% M D H Pty Ltd 3,469,000 1.0% Verve Investments Pty Ltd 3,300,000 1.0% DITM Holdings Pty Limited <DITM Family A/C> 3,260,282 1.0% HSBC Custody Nominees (Australia) Limited <GSCO Customer A/C> 3,194,232 1.0% BNP Paribas Nominees Pty Ltd <HUB24 Custodial Serv Ltd> 2,942,465 0.9% Mr Dominic Paul Allen <Westoz Services A/C> 2,677,501 0.8% Moshos Family Investments Pty Ltd <Moshos Family A/C> 2,625,001 0.8% Ecapital Nominees Pty Limited <Accumulation A/C> 1,944,282 0.6% Peter Croke Holdings Pty Ltd 1,900,000 0.6% Halibery Hotels Pty Ltd 1,745,000 0.5% Total top 20 holders 253,712,821 76.0% Other holders 80,206,803 24.0% Total issued capital 333,919,624 100.0% 2. Distribution of Equity Securities Analysis of numbers of holders by size of holding: Number of Distribution shareholders Number of shares % of shares 1 – 1,000 1,348 598,185 0.2% 1,001 – 5,000 1,219 3,323,863 1.0% 5,001 – 10,000 493 3,859,407 1.2% 10,001 – 100,000 696 21,859,631 6.6% More than 100,000 160 304,278,538 91.1% Totals 3,916 333,919,624 100.0% There were 103 holders of less than a marketable parcel of ordinary shares. 120

ASX Additional Information continued Voting Rights See Note 14(b) of the notes to the consolidated financial statements. Substantial Shareholders Substantial shareholder notices have been received from the following: Substantial shareholder Number of shares The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation and its associates (ADR program) FMR LLC and its associates DITM Holdings Pty Ltd and its associates 45,802,651 26,097,578 25,443,775 On-market Buy Back There is currently no on-market buyback program for any of IperionX Limited’s listed securities. Unquoted Securities The names of the security holders holding 20% or more of an unlisted class of security at August 31, 2025 not issued or acquired under an employee incentive scheme, are listed below: Vendor Options Director Options Director Options Director Director Director Employee Employee Employ- ee Perfor- exercisable exercisable exercisable Restricted Restricted Restricted Restricted Restricted mance at A$0.20, at A$0.20, at A$0.87, Stock Units, Stock Units, Stock Units, Stock Units, Stock Units, Rights, expiring expiring expiring expiring expiring expiring expiring expiring expiring December September December September December December December April 10, April 10, Holder 1, 2025 9, 2025 5, 2026 9, 2025 5, 2026 5, 2027 31, 2027 2029 2023 Lamont Leatherman 425,000 – – – – – – – Scott Sparks 200,000 – – – – – – – Nalaroo Holdings Pty Ltd – 106,093 35,364 67,521 42,486 – – – Lorraine Martin – 200,000 106,093 35,364 67,521 42,486 – – – Melissa Waller – 200,000 106,093 35,364 67,521 42,486 – – – Beverly Wyse – 200,000 106,093 35,364 67,521 42,486 – – – Anastasios Arima – – – – – – 637,333 419,910 1,307,418 Todd Hannigan – – – – – – 318,667 295,130 918,906 Toby Symonds – – – – – – 605,333 400,533 1,247,085 Others (less than 20%) 150,000 – – – – – 764,665 522,402 – Total 775,000 600,000 424,372 141,456 270,084 169,944 2,325,998 1,637,975 3,473,409 Total holders 7 3 4 4 4 4 7 3 3 ASX Additional Information 121

ASX Additional Information continued Exploration Interests Titan Project At June 30, 2025 the Titan Project comprised of approximately 10,083 acres of surface and associated mineral rights in Tennessee, of which approximately 1,488 acres are owned by IperionX, approximately 417 acres are subject to long-term lease by IperionX, and approximately 8,178 acres are subject to exclusive option agreements with IperionX. These exclusive option agreements, upon exercise, allow IperionX to lease or, in some cases, purchase the surface property and associated mineral rights. Competent Person Statement The information in this announcement that relates to Exploration Results and Mineral Resources is extracted from IperionX’s ASX Announcement dated 6 October 2021 (“Original ASX Announcement”) which is available to view at IperionX’s website at www.iperionx.com. IperionX confirms that a) it is not aware of any new information or data that materially affects the information included in the Original ASX Announcement; b) all material assumptions and technical parameters underpinning the Mineral Resource Estimate included in the Original ASX Announcement continue to apply and have not materially changed; and c) the form and context in which the relevant Competent Persons’ findings are presented in this report have not been materially changed from the Original ASX Announcement. Forward Looking Statements This report may include forward-looking statements. These forward-looking statements are based on IperionX’s expectations and beliefs concerning future events. Forward looking statements are necessarily subject to risks, uncertainties and other factors, many of which are outside the control of IperionX, which could cause actual results to differ materially from such statements. IperionX makes no undertaking to subsequently update or revise the forward-looking statements made in this report, to reflect the circumstances or events after the date of that report. 122

Glossary of Terms and Definitions When the following terms and abbreviations appear in the text of this report, they have the meanings indicated below: AASB Australian Accounting Standards Board ADSs American Depository Shares AMC Advanced Manufacturing Center Apollo Group Apollo Group Pty Ltd ARPA-E Advanced Research Projects Agency-Energy ARH™ IperionX proprietary technology for alkaline roasting and hydrolysis ASTM American Society of Testing and Materials ASX Australian Securities Exchange Blacksand Blacksand Technology LLC CAP Compensation Advisory Partners CCO Chief Commercial Officer CEO Chief Executive Officer CFI Conduit foreign income CFO Chief Financial Officer CLO Chief Legal Officer CO2e Carbon dioxide equivalents COO Chief Operating Officer CSO Chief Strategy Officer DoW Department of War DPA Title III a provision of the Defense Production Act of 1950 that allows the President to expand the production and supply of critical materials necessary for national defense ECL Expected credit loss EPS Earnings per share Green Rutile™ IperionX proprietary technology for low carbon titanium mineral enrichment GSD™ IperionX proprietary technology for the granulation sintering deoxygenation process HAMR™ IperionX patented technology for hydrogen assisted metallothermic reduction HMAPL Hyperion Metals (Australia) Pty Ltd HSPT™ IperionX patented technology for hydrogen sintering and phase transformation process IBAS U.S. DoW Industrial Base Analysis and Sustainment grant program IperionX Limited “Company” or “IperionX”, “Consolidated Entity” or “Group” IP Intellectual property IPF Industrial Pilot Facility in Salt Lake City, Utah IRS Code Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended JORC Code Joint Ore Reserves Committee of The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, Australian Institute of Geoscientists and Minerals Council of Australia kg Kilogram KMP Key Management Personnel KPI’s Key performance indicators LCA Life Cycle Assessment LTI’s Long-term incentives LTIP Long-term incentive plan Glossary of Terms and Definitions 123

Glossary of Terms and Definitions continued Mt Metric ton N/A Not applicable Nasdaq Nasdaq Capital Market NEDs Non-Executive Directors Ordinary Shares Common shares, equity instruments that give shareholders voting rights and potential dividends Performance Rights Unquoted performance rights Performance Shares Contingent stock awards that are vesting based on performance metrics PwC PricewaterhouseCoopers R&D Research and development REE Rare earth elements RSUs Restricted stock units Regulation FD Regulation Fair Disclosure SBIR Small Business Innovation Research STI Short-term incentives Technologies IperionX’s collection of patents to certain titanium and metal alloy production technologies THM Metric tons of total heavy metal TiCl4 Titanium tetrachloride TiO2 Titanium dioxide TiH2 Titanium hydride Ti-6Al-4V Grade 5 titanium alloy Titan Project Titan Critical Minerals Project in Tennessee tpa Tons per annum TPF Titanium Production Facility TSR Total shareholder return U.S. United States of America Unlisted Options Unquoted incentive options VWAP Volume-weighted average price WA Weighted average WCP Wet Concentrator Plant ZrO2 Zirconium Dioxide 124

Corporate Directory Directors Mr. Todd Hannigan – Executive Chairman Mr. Anastasios Arima – CEO & Managing Director Ms. Lorraine Martin – Lead Independent Director Mr. Vaughn Taylor – Independent Non-Executive Director Mr. Tony Tripeny – Independent Non-Executive Director Ms. Melissa Waller – Independent Non-Executive Director Ms. Beverly Wyse – Independent Non-Executive Director Company Secretary Mr. Gregory Swan Offices Head Office 129 West Trade Street, Suite 1405 Charlotte, NC 28202 UNITED STATES Virginia Office 1092 Confroy Drive South Boston, VA 24592 UNITED STATES Tennessee Office 279 West Main Street Camden, TN 38320 UNITED STATES Utah Office 1782 W 2300 S West Valley City, UT 84119 UNITED STATES Registered Office Level 9, 28 The Esplanade Perth, WA 6000 AUSTRALIA Website www.iperionx.com Stock Exchange Listings Nasdaq Capital Market (NASDAQ: IPX) Australian Securities Exchange (ASX: IPX) Share Registry Automic Pty Ltd Tel: 1300 288 664 Int: +61 2 9698 5414 Lawyers United States Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher Australia Thomson Geer Bankers United States The Bank of New York Mellon Corp PNC Bank Australia National Australia Bank Auditor PricewaterhouseCoopers Perth, Australia Corporate Directory 125

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