Every retirement calculator on the internet will tell you that you need $70,000/year in retirement.
Or $50,000. Or $85,000. Or “70% of your pre-retirement income.”
All completely useless.
Because none of them account for the fact that you live in Balmain, not Ballarat.
Council rates in Balmain? $3,500-$4,500/year.
Home insurance? $2,000-$3,000/year.
A coffee and smashed avo at Birchgrove Deli? $28.
Balmain isn’t cheap. And pretending your retirement costs will match the national average is financial fantasy.
So let me show you what retirement ACTUALLY costs in Balmain – not generic internet estimates, but real numbers from real locals who’ve been retired for 5+ years.
I’ll break it down by three lifestyle levels: Frugal, Comfortable, and Generous.
By the end, you’ll know exactly what YOUR retirement will cost.
“The $1 Million Retirement Myth”
Not everyone retires the same way. Some people are happy with simple pleasures. Others want to travel and dine out regularly.
Here are the three typical Balmain retirement lifestyles I see:
You own your home outright. You’re careful with money but not miserable. You prioritize experiences over stuff.
What this looks like:
This isn’t poverty. It’s comfortable simplicity.
You own your home. You enjoy life without obsessing over every dollar. You travel, dine out, see shows, help the grandkids.
What this looks like:
This is the “sweet spot” for most Balmain retirees.
You own your home. You want to enjoy retirement fully – travel extensively, dine out whenever you feel like it, never worry about the cost of a coffee.
What this looks like:
This is financially comfortable retirement.
Let’s get specific. Here are the actual costs for a Balmain retiree couple, broken down by category.
Council rates: $3,500-$4,500/year
Water rates: $800-$1,200/year
Home insurance: $2,000-$3,000/year
Strata (if apartment): $4,000-$8,000/year
Maintenance and repairs: $3,000-$6,000/year (gutters, painting, plumber, electrician)
Gas and electricity: $2,500-$3,500/year
Internet and phone: $1,200-$1,800/year
Total housing costs (house): $13,000-$20,000/year
Total housing costs (apartment): $14,000-$24,000/year
This is for a PAID-OFF home. If you still have a mortgage, add another $20,000-$40,000/year in repayments.
Private health insurance (couple): $4,000-$7,000/year
GP visits and specialists: $1,500-$3,000/year (after Medicare rebates)
Medications (PBS): $500-$1,500/year
Dental: $800-$2,000/year
Physio, podiatry, optometry: $1,000-$2,000/year
Total healthcare: $7,800-$15,500/year
Important: This increases as you age. Budget $10,000-$12,000/year in your early 70s, $12,000-$18,000/year in your late 70s.
Groceries (couple): $250-$350/week = $13,000-$18,200/year
Balmain isn’t cheap for groceries. IGA and Harris Farm prices add up.
If you’re careful and shop at Coles/Woolworths in Rozelle: $13,000-$15,000/year
If you shop mostly local/organic: $16,000-$18,200/year
This is where lifestyle choices create massive variation.
Frugal lifestyle:
Comfortable lifestyle:
Generous lifestyle:
Car registration: $400-$500/year
Car insurance: $800-$1,200/year
Fuel: $2,000-$4,000/year (depending on usage)
Servicing and repairs: $1,000-$2,000/year
Parking (if needed): $0-$2,000/year
Public transport (seniors Opal): $500-$1,000/year
Total transport (one car): $4,700-$10,700/year
Total transport (car-free, public transport): $500-$1,500/year
Many Balmain retirees ditch the car and walk/ferry/bus everywhere. Saves $8,000-$10,000/year.
Frugal lifestyle:
Comfortable lifestyle:
Generous lifestyle:
Travel is the biggest variable in retirement spending.
Clothing and shoes: $1,500-$3,000/year
Hairdresser/barber: $800-$1,500/year
Personal care products: $600-$1,200/year
Household items (cleaning, replacement goods): $1,500-$2,500/year
Total: $4,400-$8,200/year
This varies wildly depending on family situation.
Frugal lifestyle:
Comfortable lifestyle:
Generous lifestyle:
Always budget for unexpected costs:
Total: $4,500-$11,000/year
Let’s add it all up for a Balmain couple (mortgage-free, house not apartment):
Housing: $13,000
Healthcare: $8,000
Groceries: $14,000
Dining/entertainment: $6,700
Transport (one car): $6,000
Travel: $3,500
Clothing/personal: $4,500
Gifts/family: $1,500
Miscellaneous: $5,000
Total: ~$62,200/year
With careful budgeting: $52,000-$58,000/year
Housing: $15,000
Healthcare: $10,000
Groceries: $16,000
Dining/entertainment: $12,900
Transport (one car): $7,000
Travel: $9,500
Clothing/personal: $6,000
Gifts/family: $3,000
Miscellaneous: $7,000
Total: ~$86,400/year
But most couples in this bracket actually spend: $62,000-$72,000/year
Why the difference? They’re strategic about where they spend. Not every category maxes out.
Housing: $18,000
Healthcare: $12,000
Groceries: $17,500
Dining/entertainment: $21,000
Transport (nice car): $9,000
Travel: $22,000
Clothing/personal: $7,500
Gifts/family: $8,000
Miscellaneous: $9,000
Total: ~$124,000/year
But in reality: $78,000-$95,000/year
Why? Even generous retirees have years where they don’t travel as much, or they cut back on dining out, or family support isn’t needed.
“What $600,000 in Super Actually Buys You”
The internet says you’ll spend 70% of your pre-retirement income.
If you earned $100,000/year working, you’ll need $70,000/year in retirement.
This is nonsense.
When you retire, you eliminate:
But you might ADD:
The “70% rule” is a lazy generalization. Calculate YOUR actual costs.
Whatever you’re spending in your 60s will cost 30-40% more by your 80s.
$60,000/year today = $78,000-$84,000/year in 20 years (at 3% inflation)
Plan for this. Your costs will increase even if your lifestyle doesn’t change.
Most people budget $5,000/year for healthcare and are shocked when they’re spending $12,000-$15,000/year by their mid-70s.
Healthcare costs accelerate from age 70+. Budget accordingly.
You THINK you spend $55,000/year. You ACTUALLY spend $68,000/year.
Track your spending for 3-6 months. You’ll be surprised.
Now that you know what retirement costs, let’s talk about income.
Most Balmain retirees have TWO income sources:
You need: $65,000/year
Super balance: $650,000
Sustainable super drawdown (5%): $32,500/year
Age Pension (part): $28,000/year
Total income: $60,500/year
Gap: -$4,500/year
Options:
You need: $55,000/year
Super balance: $580,000
Sustainable super drawdown (5%): $29,000/year
Age Pension (part): $32,000/year
Total income: $61,000/year
Surplus: +$6,000/year
You’re covered. Easily.
You need: $85,000/year
Super balance: $920,000
Sustainable super drawdown (5.5%): $50,600/year
Age Pension: $8,000/year (reduced due to higher assets)
Total income: $58,600/year
Gap: -$26,400/year
Options:
Everything above is for couples. Singles have different costs:
Frugal single: $38,000-$42,000/year
Comfortable single: $45,000-$52,000/year
Generous single: $55,000-$68,000/year
Forget the generic retirement calculators.
For Balmain locals living mortgage-free:
These aren’t poverty budgets. They’re realistic, liveable, enjoyable retirements.
The key is knowing YOUR number – not some internet average.
Track your spending now. Project your retirement costs. Calculate your income sources.
Then you’ll know if you’re ready.
Generic calculators give you generic answers. Your retirement budget needs to reflect YOUR lifestyle in YOUR suburb.
The One Page Financial Plan gives you a customized retirement budget based on your actual spending patterns and Balmain costs.
For $660 (inc GST), you’ll discover:
✓ Your exact retirement costs (not internet estimates)
✓ Whether your super + Age Pension covers it
✓ Where you can trim costs without sacrificing quality of life
✓ What lifestyle you can actually afford in retirement
✓ 100% satisfaction guaranteed
📧 Email: adam@suncow.com.au
📞 Phone: 0418 785 200
It’s a Tuesday morning in March 2020. You check your super balance before breakfast. It’s down $80,000 from last week. You’re supposed to retire in four months. Your coffee goes cold on the bench. This is the scenario that terrifies every pre-retiree in Balmain. Not the abstract idea of a market crash – but the …
Continue reading “What Happens to Your Income When the Stock Market Crashes?”
You’re 52. You check your super balance: $380,000. Your stomach drops. “That’s all? After 30 years of working?” Then you remember that article you read: “You need $1 million to retire.” Quick math: You need to more than double your super in 13 years. That seems… impossible. So you do what many Australians in their …
Continue reading “Building Your Financial Herd: Investment Strategy in Your 50s”
Imagine you inherit a dairy farm with 50 healthy cows. Each cow produces milk that you can sell for income. Together, they generate enough money to live on comfortably. Now imagine someone suggests: “Why don’t you sell five cows this year to buy a new truck?” Sure, you’d get the truck. But now you only …
Continue reading “Why Your Investment ‘Cows’ Should Never Be Sold in Retirement”
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.