Here’s the conversation I have at least three times a week with Balmain locals:

Them: “I’ve got $650,000 in super. Is that enough to retire?”

Me: “Enough for what?”

Them: “You know… to retire. To live on. Is it enough?”

Me: “How much do you need to live each year?”

Them: “Um… I’m not sure. Maybe $60,000? $70,000? I haven’t really worked it out.”

And there’s the problem.

You’re stressing about whether you have “enough” saved, but you haven’t actually calculated what “enough” means. You’re asking if $650,000 is sufficient without knowing what it needs to be sufficient for.

It’s like asking “Is 50 litres of petrol enough?” without saying where you’re driving.

Let me show you how to actually calculate your real retirement income – the number that determines whether you can retire comfortably or need to keep working.

Why Income Matters More Than Net Worth

Your super balance is just a number on a screen. What matters is: How much can that balance generate in annual income?

Two people with $700,000 in super can have wildly different retirement experiences depending on how their money is invested:

Person A: Invested in growth assets, generating $25,000/year in income. They’ll need to sell assets constantly to make up the shortfall.

Person B: Invested in income-producing assets, generating $45,000/year. Combined with Age Pension, they’ve got $65,000/year without selling anything.

Same super balance. Completely different income. Completely different retirement.

“Your Retirement Number Isn’t What You Think”

So let’s stop obsessing over your total balance and start calculating the only number that actually matters: Your annual retirement income.

The 4-Step Retirement Income Calculation

Here’s the framework I use with every Balmain client. It takes 15 minutes and gives you absolute clarity on whether you can retire or what needs to change.

Step 1: Calculate Your Annual Living Costs

First, figure out what you actually spend. Not what you “should” spend. Not what ASFA says. What do YOU actually need to live comfortably?

Essential expenses:

  • Housing (rates, insurance, maintenance – or rent if not a homeowner)
  • Utilities (electricity, gas, water, internet, phones)
  • Food and groceries
  • Transport (car costs, public transport, or both)
  • Health (insurance, prescriptions, specialists)
  • Insurance (car, home, health, life if applicable)

Lifestyle expenses:

  • Dining out and entertainment
  • Travel (realistic estimate – not aspirational)
  • Hobbies and recreation
  • Gifts and family support
  • “Life happens” buffer (10% of total for unexpected costs)

Example – Sarah and John, Balmain homeowners:

  • Housing (rates, insurance, maintenance): $6,500
  • Utilities and internet: $4,200
  • Food and groceries: $12,000
  • Transport (one car): $6,000
  • Health and insurance: $8,500
  • Dining and entertainment: $8,000
  • Travel: $6,000
  • Gifts and family support: $3,000
  • Buffer (10%): $5,400

Total annual living costs: $59,600

That’s their number. Not ASFA’s number. Not some internet calculator’s number. Theirs.

Step 2: Calculate Your Super Income

Next, figure out how much annual income your super can reliably generate.

For income-focused portfolios (dividend shares, income funds, rental properties), a reasonable sustainable income rate is about 6% of your super balance.

Formula: Super Balance × 0.06 = Annual Super Income

Sarah and John’s calculation:

  • Combined super: $650,000
  • Income rate: 6% (invested in income-producing assets)
  • Annual super income: $650,000 × 0.06 = $39,000/year

Important note: This assumes your super is invested in income-producing assets (dividend-paying shares, income funds, etc.). If your super is mostly in growth assets, your sustainable income will be lower – maybe 3-4%. This is why investment strategy matters enormously.

Step 3: Add Your Age Pension Income

Most Australians ignore the Age Pension when planning retirement. This is a huge mistake.

Even a part Age Pension can add $15,000-$20,000 to your annual income. That’s like having an extra $300,000-$400,000 in super generating income – except it’s guaranteed, indexed to inflation, and paid for life.

Use the government’s Age Pension calculator to estimate your entitlement:

Age Pension calculator

Sarah and John’s Age Pension:

  • Combined super: $650,000
  • Home (not counted in assets test): Owned outright
  • Other assets: Minimal
  • Age Pension entitlement: Approximately $18,000/year (part pension)

Step 4: Calculate Your Total Retirement Income

Now add it all up:

Super Income + Age Pension + Any Other Income = Total Annual Retirement Income

Sarah and John’s total income:

  • Super income: $39,000/year
  • Age Pension: $18,000/year
  • Part-time consulting (optional): $0

Total annual retirement income: $57,000/year

The Gap Analysis: Can You Retire or Not?

Now comes the moment of truth. Compare your annual costs to your annual income:

Sarah and John’s gap analysis:

  • Annual living costs: $59,600
  • Annual retirement income: $57,000
  • Shortfall: $2,600/year

That’s it. That’s the gap. Not some vague anxiety about “not having enough.” An actual, specific number: $2,600/year.

And here’s the beautiful thing: When you know the exact gap, you know exactly what needs to change. Sarah and John don’t need to work another five years. They don’t need to “save more.” They need to find $2,600/year – which they can do by:

  • Adjusting their lifestyle slightly (maybe $4,000 less on travel)
  • Working one day a week for the first two years ($6,000/year part-time income)
  • Contributing an extra $50,000 to super before retiring (adds $3,000/year income)

All of these are manageable. None require working another decade. Because the gap is tiny – they just didn’t know that until they ran the numbers.

Why This Calculation Changes Everything

When I walk clients through this four-step process, something shifts. The anxiety eases. The fear of the unknown disappears.

Why? Because you’ve replaced vague worry with specific numbers.

Before: “Do I have enough? I don’t know. Maybe? I hope so?”

After: “I need $62,000/year. I can generate $58,000/year. I have a $4,000 gap. Here are three ways to close it.”

See the difference? One is FORO (Fear Of Running Out). The other is a solvable problem.

Your Retirement Number Isn’t What You Think”

Real Balmain Example: Two Very Different Outcomes

Let me show you how powerful this income calculation is with two real examples from my Balmain clients (names changed).

Client 1: David, 62, $850,000 super

David came to me convinced he needed to work until 67. He’d read online that you need $1 million to retire, and he was still $150,000 short.

We ran the income calculation:

  • Annual costs: $68,000
  • Super income (6%): $51,000
  • Age Pension (part): $12,000
  • Total income: $63,000
  • Gap: $5,000/year

Solution: David could easily cover that $5,000 by doing one day a week consulting for the first few years of retirement. He retired at 63, not 67. Four extra years of freedom – all because he calculated income instead of obsessing over his balance.

“The $1 Million Retirement Myth”

Client 2: Maria, 59, $520,000 super

Maria thought she was nowhere near ready to retire. Her super balance was “only” $520,000 – well short of that mythical million.

Her calculation:

  • Annual costs: $52,000 (owns home outright, modest lifestyle)
  • Super income (6%): $31,200
  • Age Pension (part): $22,000
  • Total income: $53,200
  • Surplus: $1,200/year

Maria had enough. Right now. Not in 8 years. Today.

She thought she needed another $480,000. She actually needed $0. The calculation showed her the truth.

The Action Steps: What to Do With Your Numbers

Once you’ve run your own calculation, you’ll land in one of three scenarios:

Scenario 1: You have a surplus (income exceeds costs)

Congratulations – you can retire now if you want to. Your job is to protect and maintain your income sources. Don’t let anyone talk you into “growth strategies” that sacrifice reliable income for potential capital gains.

Scenario 2: You have a small gap (less than $10,000/year)

This is easily fixable. Options:

  • Trim lifestyle slightly
  • Work part-time for a few years
  • Make final super contributions before retiring
  • Optimize Age Pension positioning

Scenario 3: You have a large gap (more than $15,000/year)

This requires a proper strategy. You need to either:

  • Increase your super balance (more contributions, more time)
  • Restructure your investments for higher income
  • Reduce your lifestyle costs
  • Delay retirement a few years
  • Explore property equity or downsizing options

At least now you know exactly what the gap is and can make an informed decision about how to close it.

Get Your Real Retirement Income Number

You can do this calculation yourself using the framework above. But here’s what most people miss:

  • They underestimate their Age Pension entitlement
  • They use the wrong income rate for their investment mix
  • They forget about franking credits and tax advantages
  • They don’t account for inflation properly
  • They miss opportunities to restructure for better income

That’s where a One Page Financial Plan comes in. We run these exact numbers – properly – and show you exactly where you stand.

For $660 (inc GST), you get:

✓ Your precise annual retirement income calculation

✓ Your exact gap (if any) and what it means

✓ Specific strategies to close any shortfall

✓ Clear answers on whether you can retire now or what needs to change

✓ 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.