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Considering your retirement lifestyle, the cost of living and your expected annual retirement income, is crucial in your retirement planning.
BSc. Econ, BCom, MBus
Authorised Representatives of Millennium Three Pty Ltd
ABN 61 094 529 987
AFSL 244252
As record numbers of Australians transition into retirement, considering your retirement lifestyle, the cost of living and your expected annual retirement income, is crucial in your retirement planning.
For many Australians transitioning into retirement, the increasing cost of housing is a hindrance on people’s ability to pay off their property before they retire, and this may push them into a few common scenarios:
Deciding where and how you want to live is a decision-making process fraught with stress, whether you’re about to retire or you’re a young adult watching your parents prepare for their retirement. A recent survey by National Seniors Australia outlined that many people worry they will run out of savings and investments in retirement. Women worry more about retirement savings than men, worrying is 65% higher in people who have less than $500,000 in savings and 53% higher worry in people who expect their main source of income in retirement to be the Age Pension. [1]
According to the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA), there are two broad categories of lifestyles in retirement — comfortable or modest. A comfortable retirement affords people a good car, top-tier private health insurance, dining out on regular occasions, travel, and other lifestyle factors you enjoyed while working. In a modest retirement, you may be entitled to the Age Pension, but you’ll only be able to afford a basic lifestyle, with limited funds available for small luxuries.
There are facts and figures from industry bodies and experts, but your retirement lifestyle is unique to you, so mapping out your retirement plan with a financial adviser can give you a clearer picture on what you will be able to afford. As a benchmark for comparing, here are some widely touted figures:
While these numbers help you understand cost of living in retirement, things become complicated if you don’t own your home. The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) calculate based on the assumption that retirees will own their home before retiring, therefore not need to allocate money towards mortgage repayments or rent in the household budget.
However, the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) report that around 285,000 Australian households are renting in retirement. While renting may afford you the ability to live in a more desirable location than if you owned a property, the cost of your rent still needs to be factored into your retirement planning and therefore the numbers provided by ASFA need to be tweaked if you are renting in retirement. And this will blow out the figures of what annual income you need to have access to in retirement.
Based on the ASFA’s calculations, if you retire in Sydney you would need $1,166,000 as a couple or $1,045,000 as a single to afford a comfortable retirement lifestyle whilst renting. While this number may be slightly lower for other cities and regional centres where rental prices are lower, it provides a more realistic calculation of exactly how much your retirement nest egg should be if you’ll be renting in retirement. Having a greater understanding of how you can structure your super funds in the accumulation and drawdown phases can help you be better prepared.
As with other passive investments, you need to ensure you’re not drawing down so much capital each year that your balance isn’t compounding at an adequate rate to provide you with enough retirement income for the rest of our life.
For example, if the average return on your super balance is 9% per year, it’s wise to drawdown 4% or less of your balance each year so you can maintain adequate funds throughout retirement, which may be longer than you think. A good financial adviser can work through the calculations based on your individual circumstances, factoring home ownership or rent and any Centrelink benefits you are entitled to, so you can live the retirement lifestyle you want without a fear of running out of money.
If you don’t own a home and you’re not keen on renting, there are other options. Maybe you want the freedom of living in a motor home, setting up in a modern tiny home, basing yourself in a retirement village, securing granny flat rights, or, living on a cruise ship. While these options may not be for everyone, the very nature of retirement, can give you the flexibility to live a nomadic lifestyle with a smaller carbon footprint. If you’re interested in staying in one place, a retirement village or granny flat can provide you with that lifestyle.
When it comes to your retirement dreams and finances, your picture looks different to the next person. If you don’t own your home, you’ll need to factor the cost of rent into your retirement planning to ensure your nest egg and the annual income you’ll draw is enough to provide your desired retirement lifestyle. If you do own your home you won’t have to worry about the mortgage or rent, but what about home improvements and modifications as you age?
With so many different scenarios to consider, it is wise to work through your options with your financial adviser.
Source:
The figures quoted in this article are sourced from the ASFA Retirement Standard, March quarter 2019 report. View Source
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Perspective Wealth Management Pty Ltd
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Trading as Luck Financial Group is a corporate authorised representative of Millennium3 Financial Services Pty Ltd
ABN 61 094 529 987 – AFSL 244 252
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