logo
How much super you need for a comfortable retirement revealed

How much super you need for a comfortable retirement revealed

The average 30-year-old Australian earning the median wage is on track for a comfortable retirement for the first time, forecasters have revealed.
The milestone comes from analysis by the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA), and was down to mandatory 12 per cent superannuation payments becoming a reality.
'This is a major milestone in Australia's retirement system,' ASFA chief executive Mary Delahunty said.
'With the super guarantee increase to 12 per cent, we are seeing super fulfil its objective of providing a dignified retirement for ordinary Australians, with today's 30-year-olds reaping the rewards of decades of progress in our world-class super system.'
From July 1, workers' superannuation guarantee rate increased from 11.5 per cent to 12 per cent, meaning employers pay 12 per cent equivalent amount of your earnings into super.
Unpaid super is a concern in many casualised industries.
Proponents of the increase in super payments say the change addresses some effects of generational inequalities in Australia. Picture: NewsWire
The bump to 12 per cent tips today's 30-year-olds into a comfortable retirement, the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia modelling says.
The increase means about an extra $20,000 come retirement time.
The test-case 30-year-old needs to be on at least the median wage though, which is about $75,000. The average Australian wage is $102,741.
'With the 12 per cent super guarantee coming in, we can now say that the system foundations are cemented for young, working people to have a comfortable retirement,' Ms Delahunty said.
'It's a moment all Australians should be proud of.'
A comfortable retirement means being able to pay for health insurance, a decent car, phone and internet, regular leisure activities, an annual domestic holiday and an international holiday every seven years.
The analysis shows younger workers should be on track for a comfortable retirement. Picture: NewsWire / Gaye Gerard
The amount needed to tick these boxes is $595,000 as a single homeowner and $690,000 combined for a homeowning couple.
A retiring renter needs an extra 30 per cent.
As well as being positive news for Australians only a decade or two into their working lives, the super guarantee increase to 12 per cent has also been heralded as a win for women.
Modelling on the change, done by super fund HESTA, projects the increased payments will enhance the stark difference between younger women and women retiring now.
Under HESTA's modelling, a woman starting her career in 2025 was now projected to have $712,000 of super when she retired; $411,000 more than the average female retiring this year.
At the moment, the average Australian male aged in his early 60s has $395,000 in super, versus $313,360 for women.
Blair Jackson
Reporter
Blair's journalism career has taken him from Perth, to New Zealand, Queensland and now Melbourne.
Blair Jackson
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners
Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners

News.com.au

time32 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

Inside the hidden Queensland suburb rated as the best spot for homeowners

Danny and Amy Neilsen arrived in Mudgeeraba only two months before it was named Queensland's best lifestyle suburb for homeowners. With a two-year-old and a four-week old baby, the couple searched up and down the Gold Coast to find the right home for their growing family. 'We were probably looking for a good 8 months,' Mr Neilsen said. 'Which was pretty difficult — going through those processes and the weekend open homes while juggling a toddler, because they usually coincide with naptime.' When the pair found a home they could afford, they didn't yet realise the benefits of the suburb. A new report form the MCG Quantity Surveyors found the Mudgeeraba-Bonogin area to be the best property market in Southeast Queensland for lifestyle and growth. Using info from SuburbTrends, the suburbs were ranked by a mix of beach access, natural environment, urban amenities and family-friendliness. Mudgeeraba-Bonogin was one of four Gold Coast suburbs in the top ten list, along with five Sunshine Coast suburbs and just one Brisbane suburb. 'We had no idea it was so beautiful and friendly out here, but now that we do know we kind of want to spread the word a bit,' Ms Neilsen said. 'The moment we moved in, all our neighbours knocked on our door and said 'anything you need, let us know' – which we've never really had before.' The couple bought a three-bedroom home in the area for a little over $1m, with homes typically selling for around $1.295 million. Ms Neilsen said many of the homes they had seen were heritage and helped give the area a modern village feel. 'People have been here for 45 years in our street,' she said. 'You feel like you're secluded from all the business of some of the more dense suburbs,' Mr Neilsen said. '[But] we have accessibility to the beach [and] work in 15 minutes.' Raine & Horne agent Jasmin Turpin, who grew up in the area, said the suburb was becoming 'highly desirable' for new families, as older residents moved out into smaller homes. 'I think it's picked up in most recent years as a hidden area,' she said. 'It's getting a bit older now so there are a lot of homes that need renovating, but it enables those first home buyers to get in there [and] do it up how they feel.' Ray White Broadbeach agent Lisa Bourne said the area's 'unique lifestyle blend' was why prices were beginning to quickly rise in the area as it was being discovered. 'As a local agent and Bonogin acreage owner, I have seen Bonogin and Mudgeeraba go from 'Where's that?' to 'I've got to live here!'', she said. Now, the Neilsens are just a short walk away from the town and its events, like the Mudgeeraba Show and the Gold Coast Car Show. 'We pack the pram and go into town on a Saturday morning and enjoy a good breakfast,' Mr Neilsen said. 'It was definitely a challenge, and it's taken us a few years to save up for what we needed to get in, but we did feel we locked out with this one.'

How first homebuyer landed top lifestyle for less
How first homebuyer landed top lifestyle for less

News.com.au

time36 minutes ago

  • News.com.au

How first homebuyer landed top lifestyle for less

Junnel Sinajon may not have been born in Townsville but he is now a confirmed local, building his first house in the NQ capital and proudly declaring his allegiance to the Cowboys and the Maroons. Dr Sinajon came to Townsville about 10 years ago and fell in love with the community and lifestyle. 'I came from a tropical country, The Philippines, and Townsville has similar weather to back home,' he said. 'I finished a degree in nursing at JCU and went back to become a medical practitioner. 'I got some job offers from the Gold Coast, Brisbane and even Coffs Harbour in NSW but I wanted to stay in Townsville. 'It's very relaxing here and the lifestyle is good.' Dr Sinajon said he loved that Townsville had most of the services and amenities of a big city and a multicultural community. 'You can connect to people from all different backgrounds,' he said. 'I'm the kind of person who goes out to restaurants, pubs and clubs, and Townsville has so much to offer in that aspect. 'You can enjoy the Strand, walk and have a coffee in front of the beach and even go to Magnetic Island easily.' Dr Sinajon said he was now also a proud NQ Cowboys and Maroons supporter. 'When I was working at Townsville hospital, everyone would wear maroon for State of Origin,' he said. 'I didn't really understand the game … but I knew Queensland was the best.' The new MCG Four-Pillar Lifestyle Index confirmed Dr Sinajon's estimation of Townsville being a lifestyle gem, ranking the NQ region as the sixth best property market in the country for lifestyle and potential price growth. Townsville also had the lowest median house price on the list. Dr Sinajon has taken advantage of Townsville's affordable property market, buying a block of land at the Somers & Hervey estate in Rasmussen and engaging the local Keir Constructions to build his new home. 'We compared other estates but Somers & Hervey really captured our attention,' he said. 'As soon as we found a lot, we paid a deposit. 'The slab has just been poured – it's very exciting.'

How a 'snowballing' $76 blockchain token trend could become the first rung on the property ladder for Australian renters
How a 'snowballing' $76 blockchain token trend could become the first rung on the property ladder for Australian renters

Sky News AU

timean hour ago

  • Sky News AU

How a 'snowballing' $76 blockchain token trend could become the first rung on the property ladder for Australian renters

Trying to save a 20 per cent deposit now feels like running on a treadmill that keeps speeding up. A recent analysis shows the average renter would need more than eight years to scrape one together, and that's if rents stop jumping tomorrow. Many young Australians have quietly decided the old dream is broken. But a different path is opening on their phones: buy a sliver of a house for the price of a night out, collect rent the next morning, repeat. What a $50 token buys On the US platform Lofty you can tap 'buy' on a $50 USD ($76 AUD) blockchain token tied to a Detroit duplex or an Atlanta townhouse. The token records your slice on the blockchain, sends your cut of the rent every day, and lets you sell whenever another investor clicks 'buy'. The idea is snowballing. Six in ten people using fractional platforms this year are under 40, the very group priced out of full ownership. The tech that makes it possible The heavy lifting sits in code. Blockchain keeps an unchangeable ledger of who owns what. Smart contracts split the rent and push it to digital wallets while we sleep. Artificial-intelligence programs crunch vacancy data and tweak rents in real time. Paperwork, conveyancing fees and month-long settlements vanish. Proof it isn't hype There have been successful models worldwide. The 'Lofty' platform in the US has already tokenised more than 140 US properties. Investors pocket rent daily and vote online if a tenant trashes a kitchen or an offer comes in. In Britain, London House Exchange (once Property Partner) runs a regulated exchange where anyone can trade slices of single flats just like shares. Singapore's RealVantage is pulling in investors from across Asia to co-own apartments in many countries, including Australian cities. None of these ventures relies on wishful thinking; they charge modest management fees and still turn a profit. Big money is noticing. Global transaction volumes from institutional investors jumped 43 per cent in the first quarter of 2025, a vote of confidence from pension funds and private equity giants. Market researchers tip real-estate tokenisation to swell from about US $3.5 billion today to nearly US $19.4 billion by 2033. Why Australia should care right now Our wage growth lags price growth. Land is scarce. Construction firms keep collapsing. Fractional ownership can't solve everything, but it can start turning renters into owners sooner. A uni graduate could drip-feed a few hundred dollars a month into tokens spread across several cities instead of hoarding every spare dollar for a single monster deposit. Over a decade, those micro stakes have grown, paid rent along the way, and built a credit-file story banks understand. It could also unlock a new supply. When thousands of small investors pool cash through a platform, developers get cheaper equity to build mid-rise rentals or retrofit empty offices. The model is already nudging US build-to-rent projects off the drawing board. There's no reason it can't bankroll medium-density infill around Parramatta or Geelong. A simple road map for Canberra Start small. Let the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) extend its existing crowd-funding sandbox to cover blockchain property tokens. Cap how much anyone can tip in while the rules bed down. Invite super funds chasing steady, green income to co-seed the first portfolios; they provide ballast and credibility. Next, pick a patch of surplus state-owned land, think car parks near train stations, package the air-rights into tokens and sell half to retail investors on a local platform. Use the cash to build energy-efficient flats and promise a slice of the rent back to token holders. The public sees a tangible project, not another scheme stuck in consultation. Finally, borrow a lesson from London. There, fractional platforms must hold each property in a stand-alone trust. If the company dies tomorrow, the trust still owns the building, and investors still own their slices. We can replicate that safeguard, and most fears about 'crypto scams' fade fast. Honest warnings Tokens are easier to sell than whole houses, but they're less liquid than shares. Some days, nobody will want your slice. Rules will keep shifting as regulators catch up. And governance matters: if a roof leaks, someone has to vote to fix it. Smart platforms make those votes painless, but buyers still need to read the fine print. The upside for a generation locked out For Gen Z, the appeal is obvious. It's low-cost. It's quick. It lives on the same screen as banking apps and streaming queues. You can track rent in real time and brag about owning a bit of a house in Texas or Toowoomba. More importantly, it flips the story from 'wait ten years, then maybe buy' to 'start building equity today'. Australia missed the first big wave of ride-sharing and watched foreign platforms set the rules. We don't need to repeat that mistake with property tokens. The technology is mature, the consumer appetite is raging and the regulatory pieces already exist. With a light touch from Canberra and a push from super funds, a $50 blockchain token could become the first rung on the property ladder for millions of young Australians. It won't cure the housing crisis overnight, but it might give the next generation something better than hopeless spreadsheets and landlord letters: a real stake in the roof over their heads, even if they only own a few shingles to start. Dr Ehsan Noroozinejad is a senior researcher at Western Sydney University who writes about innovative housing policy, modular construction, and urban resilience. He advises governments and industry on affordable-housing strategy and has appeared on ABC News, Sky News, The Guardian, The Policymaker, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Conversation.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store