Retirement Income Simulator

You might be aware that ASFA maintains a quarterly survey of the cost of living in retirement. Dividing retirees’ expenditure into categories, ASFA finds that a retiree couple who want to live comfortably need approximately 59,000 per year. There are other flavours of the standard (for singles, for a modest standard of living, and for the elderly), but I’m most interested in the comfortable couple scenario.

If you take the ASFA income amount as what you need each year, the obvious question is ‘what level of savings is required to support that income for a known period?’ This opens the proverbial can of worms, because it depends on many assumptions about the future – what return will you earn in retirement, what will inflation do, how much age pension will you receive and so on? And people have been asking what the impact of the new assets test from 2017 will be.

Anyway, it turns out that not only does it depend on assumptions about the period in retirement, but also on when you plan to retire. In particular, people about to retire will need less than those planning to retire in 10 years, even allowing for converting these amounts to today’s dollars. ASFA have recently said that a couple needs $640K to get 25 years of income in retirement, and that’s right if you plan to retire in 2040. For those retiring now, around $500K will deliver the same expected income.

Why the difference? It’s all in the age pension means tests, and how you convert future dollars to today’s dollars. The means tests work by reducing your pension for any assets or income over certain thresholds. For example, a couple loses 50c of pension for every dollar of income they earn over a threshold amount of around $7,500 per year. These thresholds are indexed (increased each year) in Australia with price inflation, or CPI. But when we convert these to today’s dollars we use wage growth, which is higher than CPI, so in today’s dollars they are reducing over time. In 25 years’ time, you will be penalised for holding a smaller amount of assets than you would today, and hence you need more of your own super to cover the shortfall in age pension.

In the Retirement Income Simulator, we have kept things simple up to now by assuming that the thresholds are indexed at the same rate as we use to convert to today’s dollars. But as the simulator evolves, we are able to make it more sophisticated, so the latest release includes CPI indexation of the means test thresholds.

For the record, here are the assumptions, I’m using for my $500K now:

  • Couple are homeowners aged 67 with no debt and no other assets or income
  • Their super is invested in an account based pension
  • Their super earns a net investment return of 7%pa
  • Indexation of age pension 4%pa
  • Indexation of means test thresholds 2.5%
  • Assets test threshold $375K as of 1 January 2017, discounted one year
  • Desired total income $59K for 25 years, indexed at 4%pa
  • Asset requirement is in today’s dollars, discounted at 4%pa

Here’s what it looks like in the Retirement Income Simulator.

And if you’re really interested in all the details, here’s the report for this scenario.


Tags: retirement-planning asfa-retirement-standard

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Tax changes arising from Federal Budget 2020

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Inflation update
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2017 q3

New enhancement for the self-employed
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2016 q4

Calculator Updates for December 2016
Inflation update
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2016 q3

Modelling inflation in the simulator
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2016 q2

Federal Budget 2016
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Career changes in the Retirement Income Simulator
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2015 q4

Calculator updates for December 2015
Alternative input methods for the Retirement Income Simulator
Retirement Income Simulator improvements for the retirement phase

2015 q3

Age Pension and ASFA Retirement Standard changes
How much super do you need?
Calculator Updates for July 2015

2015 q2

Congratulations to Media Super
Infographics for simplified retirement planning
Retirement Income Simulator gets a responsive redesign