Let me guess.

You’re lying in bed at 2am, doing the math again. Your super balance. Your age. The retirement date you’ve been circling on the calendar.

You’ve Googled “how much super do I need to retire” approximately 47 times this year. Each article gives you a different answer. Some say $500,000. Others say $1.2 million. One particularly terrifying Reddit thread suggested you’d need $2 million to “be safe.”

And you’re sitting there thinking: “Do I have enough? Should I work another three years? Am I deluding myself that I can retire at 62?”

Here’s what nobody tells you: You can get a pretty good answer to this question yourself – right now – without paying anyone a cent.

I’m going to show you exactly how to assess your super balance like a financial planner would. No jargon. No sales pitch. Just a straightforward framework you can use today.

And if you discover you need help after reading this? Well, you know where to find me.

The Three Questions That Actually Matter

Forget the online calculators that spit out scary numbers. Forget the “industry standards” that don’t account for your actual life.

When I sit down with Balmain and Inner West locals aged 50-65, I’m really only asking three questions:

  1. How much income do you need each year?
  2. Where will that income come from?
  3. Will your sources cover your needs for 30+ years?

That’s it. Simple, right?

Let’s break each one down so you can answer them yourself.

Question 1: How Much Income Do You Actually Need?

This is where most people go wrong. They focus on the lump sum (“Do I have $800,000 in super?”) instead of the income stream (“Do I need $60,000 per year?”).

I explain this income-focused approach in detail here.

Here’s your DIY exercise:

Step 1: Look at Your Current Spending

Open your banking app. Check your last three months of expenses. Be honest.

  • Mortgage/rent (or will it be paid off?)
  • Groceries
  • Bills (electricity, gas, water, internet, phones)
  • Insurance (home, car, health)
  • Transport (car costs, rego, Opal card)
  • Healthcare (GP visits, specialists, medications, dental)
  • Entertainment and dining
  • Travel and holidays
  • Clothing
  • Memberships (gym, clubs, subscriptions)
  • Pet costs
  • Gifts and celebrations

Add it all up.

Most Balmain couples I work with discover they spend between $70,000-$90,000 per year while working. Singles usually spend $45,000-$60,000.

Step 2: Adjust for Retirement

Some costs go up (healthcare, travel). Some go down (no more work clothes, commuting costs, possibly no mortgage).

As a rough guide:

  • If you’re debt-free: You’ll probably need 60-70% of your current spending
  • If you still have a mortgage: You’ll need closer to 90-100% until it’s paid off

So if you’re currently spending $80,000 and you’ll be mortgage-free, you’re probably looking at around $50,000-$55,000 per year.

Write this number down. This is your Income Target.

Question 2: Where Will Your Retirement Income Come From?

Now we map out your income sources. You’ve got more than you think.

Source 1: Age Pension

Most Balmain locals qualify for at least a part Age Pension. As of 2025:

  • Single: Up to $29,754 per year
  • Couple: Up to $44,855 per year combined

Use the government’s Age Pension calculator to get a rough estimate.

Age Pension calculator

Even if you own your home and have $600,000 in super, you’ll probably still get something.

“How the Age Pension Actually Works”

Source 2: Superannuation Drawdown

Here’s the key question: How much can you safely withdraw from your super each year without running out?

The rule of thumb: 4-5% per year is sustainable.

So if you have:

  • $400,000 in super → $16,000-$20,000 per year
  • $500,000 in super → $20,000-$25,000 per year
  • $600,000 in super → $24,000-$30,000 per year
  • $800,000 in super → $32,000-$40,000 per year

This is conservative. It assumes your super keeps growing modestly even as you’re drawing from it.

Source 3: Other Income

Don’t forget:

  • Rental income from investment properties
  • Part-time work or consulting (even 1-2 days per week makes a huge difference)
  • Income from investments outside super
  • Dividends from shares

Add up all your potential income sources.

Question 3: Does It Add Up for 30+ Years?

Now comes the moment of truth.

Let’s say you’re 60, planning to retire at 65, and you’ve worked out:

  • You need $55,000 per year
  • You’ll get about $15,000 part Age Pension
  • You can draw $25,000 from your $500,000 super
  • You’ll do some casual work for $10,000 per year

Total income: $50,000 per year

Your target was $55,000, so you’re $5,000 short. But you’ve still got five years of work ahead where you could:

  • Add another $50,000-$100,000 to super through contributions
  • Pay off remaining debts
  • Save an emergency buffer outside super

The math suddenly doesn’t look scary anymore, does it?

The Balmain Advantage (That Nobody Talks About)

Living in Balmain or the Inner West gives you hidden retirement advantages:

The $1 Million Retirement Myth

1. Property Wealth

Your home is probably worth $1.5M-$3M+. That’s a massive safety net through downsizing if needed.

2. Transport Independence

Excellent public transport means you could ditch a car entirely. That’s $8,000-$12,000 per year saved.

3. Village Lifestyle

Everything’s walkable. You spend less on entertainment because you’re not driving to Parramatta for a decent café.

4. Community Support

Strong local networks mean less reliance on expensive services.

These aren’t trivial factors. They materially affect how much super you need.

The Warning Signs You Might Need Help

You can do this assessment yourself, but here are the signs you should talk to someone:

Red Flag #1: The Math Doesn’t Work

You’ve done the calculations and there’s a significant gap between income sources and needs.

Red Flag #2: You’ve Got Complexity

Multiple super accounts, investment properties, a business, adult children you’re supporting, a blended family with different beneficiaries.

Red Flag #3: You’re Paralyzed by Uncertainty

You’ve been “nearly ready” to retire for three years but keep pushing it back because you don’t feel confident.

Red Flag #4: Tax Is Eating You Alive

You’re still working and every dollar you earn gets taxed at 37-45%. There might be strategies you’re missing.

Red Flag #5: Your Partner Has Different Numbers

One of you thinks you’re ready. The other thinks you need to work another decade. You need a neutral third party to reality-check the situation.

What a One Page Financial Plan Actually Does

If you’ve read this far and you’re thinking “I need proper help with this,” here’s what we’d do in a 90-minute One Page Financial Plan session:

We’d nail down your exact numbers:

  • Your real lifestyle costs (not guesses)
  • Your full asset and income picture
  • Your Age Pension entitlement
  • Tax-effective drawdown strategies
  • Centrelink optimization

We’d model different scenarios:

  • Retire at 62 vs 65 vs 67
  • Keep working part-time vs full retirement
  • Downsize vs age in place
  • Support adult children vs protect your nest egg

We’d give you a one-page summary that shows:

✅ What you can afford

✅ When you can realistically retire

✅ What (if anything) needs to change

✅ Your specific next steps

No 50-page report you’ll never read. No ongoing fees. Just clarity.

The Bottom Line

Can you figure out if your super is enough without hiring anyone?

Yes – if your situation is straightforward.

If you’re a couple with:

  • Combined super of $600,000+
  • No debt
  • Modest lifestyle needs
  • No complex assets

…then you can probably work this out yourself using the framework above.

But if you’ve got complexity, uncertainty, or that 2am anxiety that won’t go away?

That’s a $660 conversation that could save you years of unnecessary work – or give you permission to retire earlier than you thought possible.

Ready for Clarity?

Stop guessing about your retirement future. Get definitive answers in one focused session.

The One Page Financial Plan

For $660 (inc GST), you’ll get:

✓ Your real retirement income target

✓ Whether you’re on track or what needs to change

✓ A clear roadmap for your next steps

✓ 100% satisfaction guaranteed

One Page Financial Plan

📧 Email: adam@suncow.com.au

📞 Phone: 0418 785 200

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Information provided by Suncow Wealth is general in nature and does not take into consideration your personal financial situation. It is for educational purposes only and does not constitute formal financial advice. Remember, the value of any investment can go down as well as up. Before acting, you should consider seeking independent personal financial advice that is tailored to your needs. Suncow Wealth Pty Ltd is a Corporate Representative No.441116 of AFSL 342766.