There is no universal "magic number" for how much super you should have at 55, as it depends entirely on your desired retirement lifestyle, housing situation, and eligibility for the Age Pension. However, benchmarks and average balances can provide a useful guide.
To retire on $70,000 a year in Australia, a single person typically needs around $1.1 to $1.5 million, while a couple might need about $800,000 to $1.1 million, depending on retirement age (60 vs. 67), home ownership (assuming you own it outright), and the inclusion of the Age Pension. A good rule of thumb is needing roughly 15 to 20 times your desired annual income saved, with figures varying based on your lifestyle (modest vs. comfortable) and when you stop working.
However, people with modest savings often work into their late 60s or later. If you are willing to accept a particular way of life, retiring at 55 with $500,000 may be possible. The math can work on paper, but it takes discipline and determination to stay the course when reality intervenes.
Yes, $700,000 in superannuation can be enough for retirement in Australia, especially for a comfortable lifestyle for a couple or a modest one for a single person, but it depends heavily on your desired lifestyle, whether you own your home, and if you'll receive the Age Pension. For many, it's a realistic target for a comfortable lifestyle, generating significant income through investment returns, but careful planning for inflation and expenses is crucial.
While exact real-time figures vary, estimates from around 2025 suggest approximately 400,000 to over 500,000 Australians held over $1 million in superannuation, with about 2.5% of the population reaching this milestone as of mid-2021, a figure that has likely grown with strong investment returns, though many more hold significant balances and millions are projected to reach this goal by retirement, especially men.
If you were born in 1964, the ASFA Super Guru website recommends a super balance of $469,000 at age 60 to allow for a comfortable lifestyle in retirement. The average super balance for Australians aged 60-64 was $402,838 for males and $318,293 for females, as at June 2021.
Retirement Savings When You're in Your 50s & Beyond
Suggested savings: The general guidelines recommend having eight times your annual salary saved by 60. The median income for a 55-year-old is about $60,200, which means having $482,100 saved for retirement. The average savings for those 55-65 is $244,750.
If invested with an average annual return of 7%, it would take around 15 years to turn 500k into $1 million.
$1 million is enough for a comfortable retirement if you retire at age 65. This will provide a single person with an income of $60,000 p.a. and a couple with $77,000 p.a., including Age Pension for around 30 years, based on an investment return of 6% p.a. and 3.0% p.a. inflation.
Fewer people have $1 million in retirement savings than commonly thought, with around 4.6% to 4.7% of U.S. households having $1 million or more in retirement accounts, according to recent Federal Reserve data (2022), though this percentage rises for older age groups, with about 9% of those aged 55-64 reaching that milestone. However, the median retirement savings are much lower (around $88,000-$200,000), showing a large gap between averages and reality, with many retirees having significantly less, notes.
A wealthy retiree in Australia generally has over $1 million in investable assets (excluding the family home), but for a truly high-net-worth individual, this can extend to $5 million or much more, allowing for a very comfortable lifestyle with significant income, travel, and assets, well beyond the ASFA "comfortable" benchmark (around $595k single/$690k couple for basic needs) and often without relying on the Age Pension, notes.
These figures assume you own your home, draw down your super, and receive a part Age Pension. If you want to retire earlier, say at 55, you'll need a much larger balance to self-fund your lifestyle for longer. Based on ASFA's benchmarks, that means: $850,000 for a single person, and.
$800,000 in retirement can last anywhere from 15 to over 30 years, depending heavily on your annual spending, investment returns (e.g., 4-6%), and lifestyle (e.g., modest vs. comfortable), but factors like inflation, taxes, and fees also significantly impact longevity, with higher spending and lower returns depleting funds faster. For example, spending $50k/year with good growth might last decades, while spending $60k-$70k with modest returns could see it gone in 20-25 years.
Five tips to boost your super
Believe it or not, data from the 2022 Survey of Consumer Finances indicates that only 9% of American households have managed to save $500,000 or more for their retirement. This means less than one in ten families have achieved this financial goal.
The biggest retirement mistake is often failing to plan adequately, which includes underestimating expenses (especially healthcare), ignoring inflation's impact on purchasing power, not starting savings early enough to benefit from compound interest, and leaving retirement savings in the wrong place (like not converting super to a tax-free pension), leading to running out of money or living a constrained lifestyle. A lack of a clear budget, not understanding investment options, and neglecting lifestyle/purpose planning also rank high.
Around 80,000 Australians had over $2 million in superannuation as of 2019-2020 data, with estimates suggesting this number might be higher now due to asset growth, potentially affecting around 80,000 people with balances over $3 million by 2025. While most with high balances are older, some young individuals (under 30) also hold over $2 million in super.
There's no single correct amount to save for retirement. For example, a $500,000 nest egg may be a good amount for some retirees, while others may need more, depending on where they live and how many dependents they have. If you want to figure out what size your nest egg should be, a retirement calculator can help.
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