Millions of Australians are missing tax-free super right now

By

Published on

Retired Australians could be missing thousands in tax-free super right now. New research shows millions are losing out by staying in the wrong super phase.

Australians missed out on up to $13.5 billion in tax-free investment returns between 2017 and 2025 by not transitioning their super to the retirement phase when they became eligible, HESTA says.

HESTA's latest whitepaper Make the move: guiding members to tax-free retirement found last financial year 1.8 million Australians remained in the accumulation phase despite being eligible to switch, collectively forgoing $2.5 billion.

Millions of Australians are missing tax-free super right now

By 2030, nearly three million Australians are projected to be missing out on $5.5 billion annually.

"Retirement should be a time when Australians can enjoy the rewards of a lifetime of work. Yet too many Australians are not making the move from saving for retirement to actually living in retirement - and the cost of that inaction is significant," says HESTA chief executive Debby Blakey.

"Without reform, the problem will only grow. We need system-level change to make it easier for people to access tax-free income in retirement."

Income Tax Calculator

Based on Australian resident tax rates. Medicare levy applied when selected.

The research shows all member groups irrespective of their balance, gender, homeownership, or marital status would benefit from transitioning to retirement products at eligibility.

"The research finds every eligible member cohort analysed is better off when they have access to a retirement phase option rather than staying in accumulation," Blakey says.

"That's why we're calling for a well-designed default mechanism that would seek to ensure no Australian is left behind simply because the system failed to guide them."

The whitepaper also noted the consequences are not felt equally, with women being disproportionately affected.

Female HESTA members have a take-up rate of 29%, while for all eligible members it sits at 30%. The take-up rate for the super system is 45%.

"Women who have spent their careers caring for others often retire with more modest balances - and they are precisely the members least likely to make this transition on their own," Blakey says.

By transitioning to a retirement income stream upon eligibility, members could boost total retirement income by up to 12% depending on their circumstances, compared to those who delay by four years, the whitepaper found.

In its 2026-27 pre-budget submission, HESTA has called for funds to be given the ability to actively prompt members to transition to appropriate specific fund retirement products, with the ability to opt-out.

It also called to allow default transition for eligible members into a retirement income stream, with an opt-out option for consumer protection.

Separately, Blakey will be leaving the fund later this year, opting to step down after 11 years at the helm. HESTA is now searching for Blakey's replacement and expects to announce a new chief executive ahead of her departure.

This article first appeared on Financial Standard

Get stories like this in our newsletters.

Related Stories

TAGS

Riddhima Talwani is a journalist at Financial Standard, covering Australia's wealth management industry. She has 3.5 years' experience working in news across both Australia and India, including as a producer at ausbiz and as a financial graphics journalist at Reuters. Riddy holds a Postgraduate Diploma from the Asian College of Journalism. Connect with Riddhima Talwani on LinkedIn.