Adequate retirement savings misjudged

Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) research has shown individuals across the country are overestimating how much super they will need in retirement.

.

The study revealed 42 per cent of Australians believe they need more than $1 million to retire comfortably. However, ASFA estimates a couple requires $730,000 and a single person $630,000 to provide themselves with a comfortable lifestyle when they cease gainful employment.

At the same time, the most recent ASFA Retirement Standard increased by 1.5 per cent over the March quarter for a couple and 2 per cent for a single person, while the consumer price index rose by 1.5 per cent over the same period.

“Inflation is changing how Australians think about their financial futures. When households really feel the pressure of grocery, petrol, energy and other bills [that] keep climbing, people naturally assume that retirement will cost a fortune,” ASFA chief executive Mary Delahunty noted.

“But the reality is that retirement generally costs less than working life. Retirees pay no tax on superannuation pension income after 60, most own their home outright, work-related costs disappear and concessions reduce the price of energy, medicines, transport and council rates.”

ASFA indicated the housing affordability crisis for young people may also be a factor in people’s estimations of how much they will need in retirement. A much larger proportion, 51 per cent, of young people aged between 25 to 34 feel they will need more than $1 million to retire comfortably, with 23 per cent saying they will need more than $2 million.

“House prices have diverged significantly from wages over the last two decades and many people now expect to carry rent or mortgage payments into retirement. It makes sense that they believe they will need much more in super than earlier generations did,” Delahunty said.

For retirees the biggest price increases over the 12 months to the end of March were for electricity, up 25.4 per cent, automotive fuel, up 24.2 per cent, coffee and tea, which rose by 10.7 per cent, and beef prices, which increased by 11.8 per cent.

 

 

 

June 15, 2026
Penny Pryor
smsmagazine.com.au

More Articles

The evolution of the world’s languages

Check out the evolution of the world's most spoken languages from 2500 BC to...

Read full article

Adequate retirement savings misjudged

Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) research has shown individuals across the country are...

Read full article

Record SMSF growth driven by digital access

Record SMSF growth driven by AI and digital tools, but admin and compliance challenges...

Read full article

The SBSCH will close from 1 July 2026

The ATO is warning employers not to use the small business super clearing house (SBSCH) for any further...

Read full article

Rules apply to gifting in superannuation

Australia’s age pension gifting rules are again under scrutiny as advisers warn that retirees are...

Read full article

Complications of maintaining two cost bases in Div 296

According to BT technical consultant Matt Manning, the Division 296 cost base reset requires SMSFs to maintain...

Read full article

investment and economic outlook 2026

Our latest forecasts for investment returns and region-by-region economic outlook   . Economic...

Read full article

What the Payday Super changes mean for your retirement

Significant reforms to the Australian superannuation system are about to take effect and could help people...

Read full article

Heathmont Financial Services Pty Ltd (ABN 68 106 250 104) trading as Heathmont Financial Services is a Corporate Authorised Representative (No. 262098) of Knox Wealth Management Pty Ltd (ABN 74 630 256 227), Australian Financial Services Licence Number (AFSL) 513763.

Julian McGoldrick is an Authorised Representative (No. 262098) of Knox Wealth Management Pty Ltd AFSL 513763.

Financial Services Guide - Disclaimer & Privacy Policy

^