If you’ve ever had a job, then super is going to be on your radar. Knowing what it’s all about is the first step to making it work for you.
Super is your savings account for retirement. But well before you retire, your balance could be in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. While you can’t spend it now, a sum of money that big has got to be important to you. So it makes sense to know how it works and what you can do with it before you retire.
Superannuation (super for short) is your savings for your time in retirement. It’s a sum of money you can spend when you’re no longer earning an income from paid work.
When you’re working, your employer is usually required by law to pay a certain percentage of your salary into your super. This is called the Superannuation Guarantee (SG) and the good news is that it’s going up by 0.5% each financial year until 1 July 2025 when you’ll be getting 12% saved into your super for each dollar you earn.
These SG savings aren’t taken out of your salary like income tax. Super contributions are an extra amount included in your employment package that your employer saves into your super fund on your behalf.
Super is your money and you get to control what happens to it, within certain limits. This starts with choosing a super fund which is similar to a savings account, except you can only withdraw the money under certain circumstances.
Just like your employer is legally responsible for paying your SG contributions, super funds have a responsibility to look after your money and help you invest it so your savings can grow faster. They get to charge fees for doing this, which are paid straight from your super account.
When you retire, you may be able to get some income from the Age Pension, an income support payment from Centrelink. But depending on your plans for retirement, how much you spend from day to day, and whether you rent or own your own home, the Age Pension may not be enough.
Your super savings are there to give you the income you need to choose how you want to live in retirement. It can come in handy before you retire too. Super can help you learn about investing and even help you save for a home. Keep reading to find out more.
Super doesn’t have to just sit there, waiting for you to spend in retirement. It can actually work really hard for you and help you get ahead in more ways than you think, like saving for a home.
Why make investment choices in super when it’s easier to just get on with life?
Here are three great reasons:
If retirement seems too far away, there could be another goal on your list your super savings can help with. You can’t put it towards a car or your next big trip overseas, but what if you could save faster for your new home through your super?
The First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS) could see you on your way to owning your first home sooner:
As we’ve seen during COVID-19, financial hardship can affect people for the most unexpected reasons. And during the early months of the pandemic, the Federal Government made it possible for people to withdraw their super if they had lost their income and didn’t have savings to fall back on and pay their bills.
The window for this early withdrawal of super has closed now. But there are some other circumstances where you can apply to the ATO to access a limited amount from your super before retirement when you are in need of financial help to:
You can also apply to your super fund for early access if you:
Both the ATO and your super fund have strict conditions around any claim you make for early access for any of these circumstances. Your super fund can help you find out if you may be eligible for early access and how to make a claim.
Money that you can’t get your hands on now is easy to ignore. But even if you can’t spend it now, chances are you’ll be spending it someday. And the more money you have the more freedom you’ll have to spend it as and when you wish.
If the future you’re looking forward to is cut short, your super is a big part of the wealth you can pass on to your family or loved ones. And unlike other assets like your savings, property or investments, you can nominate the person or people you prefer to receive your super death benefit.
Source: MLC