Retirement at 70? It's coming, whether we like it or not
The full Danish folkepension pays around AUD $57,000 a year, but after tax, most retirees take home between roughly AUD $40,000 and $42,000. That includes a base pension, which everyone gets, and a supplement, which is means-tested. About half the payment is universal; the rest tapers off if you have higher income from savings or investments.
Loading
It's a lot more generous than our pension, but it's still a safety net, not a luxury. But if you haven't built up your own retirement savings, you'll be working longer or retiring lean.
Meanwhile, in Australia we haven't made any big statements about retirement age recently, but we've quietly been moving in the same direction. The age pension age is now 67. Access to super starts at 60. Most Australians retire somewhere in the middle, not because of the rules, but because of redundancy, burnout, or the long-awaited chance to actually enjoy life.
We don't really have a set retirement age. What we have is a cluster of access points at 60, 65 and 67, and a silent expectation that you'll figure it out for yourself.
And while we've built one of the best savings systems in the world in superannuation, we've failed to finish the job. We've neglected the retirement phase almost entirely. Most Australians don't know how much to take out, how long it will last, how it works together with the age pension, or whether they're even on track.
And let's be clear: there's no $40,000-a-year pension coming to everyone at 67 or even 70 here. Ours is fully means-tested, a fair amount lower and difficult to understand.
So maybe our government doesn't need to lift the retirement age to 70. Perhaps they'll just wait for superannuation to lift many Australians out of eligibility for it, and won't have to make any bold or controversial moves that might see one party lose an election because of angry pensioners revolting in the streets.
So while we're not lifting our pension age to 70 just yet, we shouldn't assume we'll never go there. The economics of longer lives don't just go away.
Here's what we need to face. We're living longer. Much longer. One in four 50-year-olds today will live past 95. That means a 30-year retirement isn't extreme – it's average. Maybe even an underestimate.
Raising the retirement age to 70 feels harsh to today's retirees. But if you're 50 today and not planning for retirement, knowing you might live such a long life? That's reckless.
And expecting the pension to carry the full load of your living costs, when we've got one of the best private savings systems in the world in super - that really is a missed opportunity.
So what happens next? Honestly, I think we should expect change. Maybe not next year, but eventually. The pension age will rise, and the system will have to adapt. But here in Australia, we're on a different path to the Danes so it might not need to be as extreme.
We don't pay every citizen more than $20,000 a year for 20 plus years - so the pressure on our public system isn't the same, despite what headlines might suggest.
Over the next 20 years, superannuation will take on more of the heavy lifting. Most Australians who've worked throughout their lives won't rely on the age pension the way 44 per cent of retirees do today. They'll have their own savings, and with that comes greater choice and flexibility - but also a bigger need to plan and prepare.
Loading
That's what we need to recognise now. Retirement is increasingly going to be on our own backs. So let's stop treating it like a finish line or a grand holiday. It's a phase. A long one. And we need a system that reflects that - supporting phased retirement, guiding drawdown decisions, and offering real help without a $5000 advice bill for the basics.
Right now, we're leaving people to guess. And that guesswork is costing Australians their lifestyle, their confidence, and sometimes their dignity. Will we raise the retirement age to 70? Eventually - maybe, maybe not. But honestly? It doesn't matter.
Because whether the number shifts or not, the burden is already shifting away from the government. Superannuation is steadily replacing the pension. The responsibility for funding your own retirement is now sitting squarely on your shoulders.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


West Australian
25 minutes ago
- West Australian
Telco partnership opens AI-powered search to the masses
Millions of Australians will be offered unlimited access to an AI-powered search engine in a move that could spark fresh competition among artificial intelligence platforms. Optus launched the deal with US firm Perplexity on Monday, becoming the first local telecommunications provider to package premium AI subscriptions with its plans. The move mirrors deals in other countries but also comes after the Business Council of Australia called for action to boost the development of AI regulation, support and training to turn the nation into a global AI leader by 2028. Optus will give small business and individual customers access to Perplexity Pro for 12 months under the deal, which chief customer officer Anthony Shiner said could boost the number of Australians using the technology. "AI take-up in Australia is quite low," he told AAP. "Knowing that AI, in some parts of the world, is being offered free to all citizens ... the time is right here in Australia for us to partner with a high-quality product and start the journey of revolution that we think AI will bring into everyday lives." More than half of Australians have used generative AI services (54 per cent), according to a survey by Deloitte Insights, but its reach is significantly higher in the Asia Pacific region (67 per cent). Rather than offer a chatbot service like OpenAI's ChatGPT or Google's Gemini, Perplexity will deliver a web search engine that can tap into other AI models for answers. Users will be able to ask the service complex queries with follow-up questions, Perplexity business vice-president Ryan Foutty said, or set it tasks such as creating a travel itinerary or coding a basic game. Search results appear alongside their sources of information, he said, but were not presented with advertisements and links, offering users a different type of online experience. "People want a simple, easy-to-use experience that's not cluttered like traditional search has been but also is not influenced by who is willing to pay the most amount of money to get in front of you," he said. "We're excited about Australia because historically we've seen Australia be very early to adopt new technology." Perplexity AI launched a similar deal through a partnership with Optus' parent company Singtel in Singapore and with German provider Deutsche Telekom in January. Rival AI provider Google has offered subscriptions to its Gemini chatbot through Samsung and its own smartphones in the past, while Apple teamed with OpenAI to incorporate ChatGPT into its AI platform. Optus' announcement comes after the Business Council of Australia called for the nation to seize the opportunity presented by artificial intelligence technology and introduce support, training and regulations to encourage its use.


Perth Now
26 minutes ago
- Perth Now
Telco partnership opens AI-powered search to the masses
Millions of Australians will be offered unlimited access to an AI-powered search engine in a move that could spark fresh competition among artificial intelligence platforms. Optus launched the deal with US firm Perplexity on Monday, becoming the first local telecommunications provider to package premium AI subscriptions with its plans. The move mirrors deals in other countries but also comes after the Business Council of Australia called for action to boost the development of AI regulation, support and training to turn the nation into a global AI leader by 2028. Optus will give small business and individual customers access to Perplexity Pro for 12 months under the deal, which chief customer officer Anthony Shiner said could boost the number of Australians using the technology. "AI take-up in Australia is quite low," he told AAP. "Knowing that AI, in some parts of the world, is being offered free to all citizens ... the time is right here in Australia for us to partner with a high-quality product and start the journey of revolution that we think AI will bring into everyday lives." More than half of Australians have used generative AI services (54 per cent), according to a survey by Deloitte Insights, but its reach is significantly higher in the Asia Pacific region (67 per cent). Rather than offer a chatbot service like OpenAI's ChatGPT or Google's Gemini, Perplexity will deliver a web search engine that can tap into other AI models for answers. Users will be able to ask the service complex queries with follow-up questions, Perplexity business vice-president Ryan Foutty said, or set it tasks such as creating a travel itinerary or coding a basic game. Search results appear alongside their sources of information, he said, but were not presented with advertisements and links, offering users a different type of online experience. "People want a simple, easy-to-use experience that's not cluttered like traditional search has been but also is not influenced by who is willing to pay the most amount of money to get in front of you," he said. "We're excited about Australia because historically we've seen Australia be very early to adopt new technology." Perplexity AI launched a similar deal through a partnership with Optus' parent company Singtel in Singapore and with German provider Deutsche Telekom in January. Rival AI provider Google has offered subscriptions to its Gemini chatbot through Samsung and its own smartphones in the past, while Apple teamed with OpenAI to incorporate ChatGPT into its AI platform. Optus' announcement comes after the Business Council of Australia called for the nation to seize the opportunity presented by artificial intelligence technology and introduce support, training and regulations to encourage its use.


Perth Now
an hour ago
- Perth Now
Scammers cheat Aussies out of millions in four months
Australians have lost at least $119 million to scams in the first four months of 2025, as phishing cons almost tripled in value. The consumer watchdog's National Anti-Scam Centre is calling on businesses to join forces to share data to combat increasingly sophisticated frauds. "Scams are affecting Australians of all ages, often beginning with an unprompted or unexpected contact via social media and other digital platforms," Australian Competition and Consumer Commission Deputy Chair Catriona Lowe said. "Sharing information is a key step towards improving community safety – organisations, such as banks, digital platforms, and telecommunication companies, can help disrupt scams faster and reduce the harm they cause." While the number of overall scam reports in the first four months of 2025 fell by almost a quarter to 72,230, value of losses swelled to $119 million, Scamwatch data showed. Phishing scams - where criminals use trusted channels to trick people into revealing personal information - accounted for $13.7 million in losses, nearly tripling compared to $4.6 million in early 2024. The use of social media to target victims is on the rise, with the number of people reporting losses jumping by almost half to more than 3300, as total losses spiked by more than 30 per cent to $23.4 million. Phone scams are on the decline, falling 11 per cent compared to early 2024, but they still account for the biggest proportion of losses, with $25.8 million scuppered between January and the end of April. Australians aged 65 and older were impacted most by scams with losses totalling more than $33 million. "While the average and median losses per victim have slightly decreased, the rise in overall financial loss and the number of people being impacted is a reminder to stay alert," Ms Lowe said. "We encourage all Australians to report suspicious scam activity, even if no money is lost as you can provide us with vital intelligence, and talk to friends and family to help spread awareness." While a piece of data could seem unremarkable on its own, it could help form powerful intelligence when combined with other leads, Ms Lowe said. "With data held across the ecosystem, sharing data with the National Anti-Scam Centre enables those vital connections to be made," she said. The watchdog urged Australians never to give away personal information if uncertain and noted scammers would try to create a sense of urgency. The ACCC advised people to hang up the phone and call back organisations via a trusted number to verify the contact, and to call their bank immediately if money is lost. People worried after handing over personal information should call IDCARE on 1800 595 160.