CHOOSE YOUR ADVISER

Vera Gu 
   
Robert Castro
02 8051 3119 admin@eppwm.com
Everest Partners Private Wealth ManagementEverest Partners Private Wealth Management
  • Home
  • About Us
  • Our Services
    • Core Services
      • Financial Planning
      • Superannuation
      • Retirement
      • Investments
      • Finance and Debt Management
      • Risk Insurance
    •  Additional Services
      • Share portfolio management
      • Estate Planning
      • SMSF Advice and Administration
  • Resources
    • Our Diary Notes
    • Our Client Manuals
    • Our Client Newsletter
    • Fact Sheets
    • Financial Calculators
    • Fact Finder & FSG
    • Privacy Policy
    • Financial Services Guide
      • Rob Castro
      • Vera Gu
  • Contact Us

Everest Partners Private Wealth Management

Contact Us

02 8051 3119
admin@eppwm.com
L 36, Gateway Tower, 1 Macquarie Pl. Sydney NSW 2000

Close

Sign up to newsletter

Hi there!

We hope you enjoy reading our content. We would love to notify you when we put new content up on our website.

Subscribe with us today!

Sign up to newsletter
Please leave this blank

What Australians do with their super

What Australians do with their super

Australians are actually really sensible about accessing their super.

What do people do with their super

Sometimes, when you listen to the commentariat, you get the feeling that the regulators just don’t trust us to manage our own money. In many ways, this is the very reason that super exists – so that retirement savings are locked up (or ‘preserved’ in the jargon) until the person is ready to retire.

Occasionally, there are even calls to say that people should not be able to withdraw lump sums from their super – that they should be forced to withdraw the money slowly over time.

In 2015, the Productivity Commission produced some research into how people went about withdrawing money from their super. Unsurprisingly, they found that people with more money in super withdrew lower percentages of their super as a lump sum. Using the PC’s own infographics, here is what they found:

how people went about withdrawing money from their super chart

What the tables on the right show is that only 17% of total benefits are withdrawn as lump sums – but this percentage is as large as 45% for people with balances less than $50,000. As balances rise, the percentage taken as a lump sum falls to just 4% of total balances for people with benefits over $300,000.

It is then worth looking at what those people who withdraw lump sums do with the money. Again, the PC show their findings in a neat table:

what people who withdraw lump sums do with the money

As this graph shows, 56% of the money withdrawn as a lump sum is then invested elsewhere (including the member’s home: residential property is actually Australia’s best-performed long-term asset class). Add to this the 13% that is used to pay off debt, and we see almost 70% of withdrawn benefits are used for what could only be deemed to be responsible, prudent reasons. In fact, on the list above, there would only be one use of the money which could be deemed a lifestyle decision – and paying for a nice holiday or a newer car at the end of a working life is hardly an unjustifiable extravagance.

So, if we put these two pieces of research together, we see that Australians are actually quite reluctant to withdraw too much from their super fund, especially when they have larger balances, and that the money they do withdraw is then used very intelligently.

We Aussies are smarter than we think!

 
Super Splitting When should you retire
Superannuation When Retirement Comes into View
Reflection, Retirement, Superannuation

Superannuation When Retirement Comes into View

Mid-Career Superannuation
Reflection, Self-Managed Superannuation, Superannuation

Mid-Career Superannuation

Gen Z and Zuperannuation
General, Reflection, Superannuation

Gen Z and Zuperannuation

Contact Us

Contact Us
Please leave this blank

Sign up to newsletter

Sign up to newsletter
Please leave this blank
© Everest Partners Private Wealth Management 2023
ABN 22 603 037 510 | Financial Services Guide | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer

Everest Partners Private Wealth Management Pty Ltd is a corporate authorised representative (1278026) of Crown Wealth Group Pty Ltd (AFSL 494274)


General Advice Warning

All strategies and information provided on this website are general advice only which does not take into consideration any of your personal circumstances. Please arrange an appointment to seek personal financial, legal, credit and/or taxation advice prior to acting on this information.