Yes, many Australians can retire on $600,000 in super, particularly if they retire around age 67, own their home, and qualify for some Age Pension support. For a single homeowner, this level of savings often supports a modest to lower‑comfortable retirement with careful planning.
Under the modelling used here, income comes from planned withdrawals rather than investment returns alone. A drawdown of roughly 4.5 percent produces around $27,000 per year from super, which may then be supplemented by Age Pension payments depending on total assets.
This places $600,000 in an important middle category. It offers more flexibility than lower balances, but it still requires spending discipline. Retirees at this level often have room for regular travel and discretionary spending, but repeated large withdrawals or poor early market returns can still affect long‑term sustainability.
Whether $600,000 is enough depends on housing, spending habits, health, and location. Below is a simplified comparison using Australian conditions.
| Situation | Likely Outcome |
|---|---|
| Single homeowner (67) | ~$40k–$45k income (modest to lower comfortable) |
| Single renter (67) | ~$45k–$50k income but rent pressure |
| Couple homeowners (67) | ~$55k–$60k combined income |
| Retire at 60 (no pension yet) | Higher capital risk |
| Live in regional area | More sustainable |
| Live in Sydney/Melbourne | Budget tighter |
Assumptions and Modelling Framework
The figures below are illustrative only. They show what $600,000 might support under consistent assumptions rather than predicting any individual outcome.
| Assumption | Value Used |
|---|---|
| Retirement age | 67 |
| Life expectancy | 90 |
| Investment return | 5.5% p.a. |
| Real return | ~3% after inflation |
| Inflation | 2.5% p.a. |
| Sustainable drawdown | 4.5% |
| Portfolio style | Balanced |
| Home ownership | Yes |
A 23‑year horizon takes modelling to age 90. Some retirees will need funds for a shorter period, others longer, so this should be treated as a planning guide rather than a fixed endpoint.
The 4–5% withdrawal approach is often discussed internationally, but Australian outcomes differ because of super tax treatment, franking credits, and Age Pension interaction. For that reason, it is better treated as a flexible guideline rather than a strict rule.
Suggested Balanced Portfolio Allocation
| Asset Class | Allocation |
|---|---|
| Australian shares | 25% |
| International shares | 25% |
| Fixed income | 35% |
| Cash | 15% |
Most super funds offer balanced options close to this structure.
How Much Income Does $600,000 Generate?
Using a 4.5 percent withdrawal rate:
$600,000 × 4.5% = $27,000 per year
This is a drawdown figure, not a projected investment return.
Tax treatment advantage
For most retirees over age 60, withdrawals from a taxed super fund in pension phase are tax‑free. At this balance level, the transfer balance cap is not usually relevant, as it mainly affects much larger balances.
Age Pension Eligibility with $600,000
Many retirees at this level will qualify for a part Age Pension. The amount depends on total assets, not just super.
Estimated annual income example (single homeowner):
| Income Source | Estimated Annual Amount |
|---|---|
| Super drawdown | ~$27,000 |
| Age Pension | ~$13,000–$18,000 |
| Total income | ~$40,000–$45,000 |
This is slightly lower than the projection shown in the $500,000 article because higher super balances generally reduce pension eligibility through the assets test taper.
How deeming rules affect this
Centrelink applies deeming rates to financial assets to estimate income for the pension income test.
For illustration:
- First financial assets are deemed at a low rate
- Remaining assets are deemed at a higher rate
At $600,000, deemed income may sit around $11,000–$13,000 depending on thresholds. This does not mean you earn this amount. It is simply the figure Centrelink uses to assess pension eligibility.
What Lifestyle Does $600,000 Support?
For a homeowner, this income level typically supports a stable lifestyle with some discretionary flexibility.
| Expense Category | Estimated Annual Cost |
|---|---|
| Groceries | $8,000–$10,000 |
| Utilities and rates | $3,500–$4,500 |
| Insurance | $3,000–$4,500 |
| Transport | $5,000–$7,000 |
| Healthcare | $3,000–$5,000 |
| Travel | $4,000–$7,000 |
| Discretionary | $6,000–$9,000 |
Healthcare is one of the more variable costs. Some retirees maintain basic private hospital cover costing $2,000–$3,000 annually, while others rely on Medicare and budget for out‑of‑pocket costs instead.
Geographic costs also vary materially:
- Regional NSW/QLD/WA – budgets often work comfortably
- Sydney/Melbourne – costs may be 15–25% higher
- Regional SA/TAS – often slightly cheaper
- Brisbane/Perth – moderate increases compared to regional areas
This level often supports:
- Domestic travel most years
- Occasional overseas trips with planning
- Replacing a vehicle every 8–12 years
- Basic private health insurance
- Moderate home maintenance
- Small family gifts
It generally does not support:
- Frequent international travel
- Major renovations without planning
- Supporting adult children long term
- Luxury lifestyle spending
Real Example 1: David, Age 67, Adelaide
David retires from a logistics management role with $600,000 in super and owns his home in Adelaide’s northern suburbs. He has about $20,000 in cash outside super for emergencies and no debt.
His retirement structure:
- Balanced portfolio (about 60% growth / 40% defensive)
- Withdraws about $27,500 per year from super
- Receives roughly $15,000 in Age Pension
- Keeps around $60,000 in conservative assets as a buffer
Total annual income: about $42,500
David’s annual spending typically looks like this:
- Groceries: ~$8,500
- Utilities and council rates: ~$4,000
- Insurance: ~$3,200
- Car and fuel: ~$5,500
- Healthcare: ~$3,500
- Travel: ~$5,000
- Other living costs: ~$12,500
David travels interstate once a year to visit family in Queensland and takes several shorter trips within South Australia. He plays golf twice a week and budgets around $1,200 per year for club fees and equipment.
Risk management approach:
David deliberately keeps two years of spending in lower‑risk investments so he does not need to sell growth assets during downturns. When markets fall, he delays discretionary spending such as replacing appliances or taking larger holidays.
Key decision: David chose to delay replacing his car for a few extra years rather than increase withdrawals. His main concern is maintaining flexibility rather than maximising lifestyle spending.
Real Example 2: Karen, Age 67, Renting in Newcastle
Karen retires with $600,000 in super but rents a two‑bedroom unit in Newcastle. She has very limited savings outside super and relies heavily on her retirement income to cover rent and living costs.
Her financial position:
- Rent: $420 per week (~$21,800 annually)
- Super drawdown: ~$27,000
- Age Pension: ~$18,000–$21,000 (higher due to non‑homeowner thresholds and limited assets outside super)
Total annual income: about $47,000–$49,000
After rent, Karen has roughly $26,000–$28,000 available for other costs.
Her spending priorities include:
- Groceries: ~$8,000
- Utilities: ~$2,800
- Transport: ~$3,500
- Healthcare: ~$3,200
- Phone/internet: ~$1,500
- Clothing and personal: ~$1,500
- Discretionary: ~$5,500
Karen does not maintain private health insurance because rent absorbs a large portion of her income. She relies on Medicare and keeps a small buffer for unexpected medical costs.
Key challenge: Housing cost stability is her biggest risk. Even a $30 weekly rent increase would add more than $1,500 per year to expenses.
Key decision: Karen is considering moving to a nearby regional town where rents are $60–$80 per week lower. That change alone could improve her disposable income by $3,000–$4,000 per year.
Real Example 3: Mark and Susan, Couple, Regional Victoria
Mark and Susan retire with $600,000 combined super and own their home in regional Victoria. Mark worked in manufacturing and Susan worked part‑time in retail.
Their retirement income:
Super drawdown: ~$27,000
Age Pension: ~$28,000–$32,000 (assuming limited assets outside super)
Total combined income: about $55,000–$59,000
Their typical annual spending includes:
- Groceries: ~$13,500
- Utilities and rates: ~$5,200
- Healthcare: ~$8,000
- Car expenses: ~$6,500 (one vehicle)
- Travel: ~$5,500
- Home maintenance: ~$4,500
- Other living costs: ~$13,000
As a couple they benefit from shared housing costs but face higher healthcare and grocery expenses than a single retiree.
Risk management approach:
They review their spending annually and reduce discretionary travel after weak market years. They also plan to downsize in their mid‑70s if maintaining their current home becomes too expensive.
Key advantage: Their regional location keeps council rates and insurance lower than major cities. This gives them slightly more flexibility than a similar couple in metropolitan areas.
How Long Will $600,000 Last?
Using 5.5% returns and 4.5% withdrawals, the balance may last around 23–30 years depending on market outcomes and spending flexibility.
Poor early returns still matter, and sequence risk remains important at this level.
Key Risks at This Balance Level
1. Sequence risk
Poor early market performance can reduce sustainability if withdrawals continue unchanged. For example, two retirees with identical balances can experience very different outcomes if one retires just before a downturn and the other after markets recover. This is why many retirees deliberately hold short‑term spending reserves.
2. Inflation
Healthcare and insurance costs often rise faster than general inflation. Even small annual increases can compound over a 20‑year retirement and gradually reduce spending flexibility if withdrawals do not adjust.
3. Longevity risk
Living into your 90s may require reducing withdrawals later. At this balance level, the plan often works well if spending stays controlled, but there is less margin for sustained higher withdrawals.
4. One‑off spending shocks
Vehicle replacement, dental work, or major home repairs can materially affect plans because they do not appear in normal annual budgets. Retirees who plan for irregular costs tend to experience fewer surprises.
5. False sense of security
$600,000 feels materially higher than $500,000 but does not create unlimited flexibility. Overspending early remains a common mistake because the balance can appear larger than it really is in retirement terms.
Common Planning Mistakes at $600,000 (Compared to $500,000)
Retirees with $600,000 often face slightly different behavioural risks compared to those with $500,000. The challenge is usually less about survival and more about maintaining discipline as flexibility increases.
Common differences at this level include:
- Feeling “financially safe” and increasing lifestyle spending too quickly
- Taking larger discretionary withdrawals because the balance feels substantial
- Assuming Age Pension will always provide a buffer
- Becoming more conservative too early and holding excessive cash
- Underestimating healthcare and later-life costs because retirement feels secure
These are subtle shifts from the $500,000 level, where the main risks are usually under‑saving or running out of money too early. At $600,000 the risk often becomes gradual erosion rather than immediate shortfall.
Common Mistakes Retirees With $600,000 Make
Increasing withdrawals too quickly
Retirees sometimes increase spending after seeing strong early returns. This often happens after the first few good market years, when confidence rises but long‑term sustainability has not yet been tested.
Holding too much cash
Keeping large balances in cash reduces long‑term purchasing power. Some retirees move heavily to cash after retiring, which can quietly erode their position through inflation.
Ignoring pension interaction
Asset positioning can influence pension eligibility more than expected. Even small changes in financial assets can slightly change entitlements over time.
Funding adult children
Large gifts can affect pension assessments. Many retirees underestimate how Centrelink gifting rules can temporarily reduce pension eligibility.
Not reviewing fees
Even small fee differences compound over decades. A fund that looks competitive during working years may not be the most efficient option once retirement withdrawals begin.
How to Make $600,000 Work in Retirement
1. Use a bucket strategy
Holding 1–2 years of spending in defensive assets can reduce forced selling. Many retirees also hold several additional years in lower‑volatility investments so growth assets have time to recover after downturns.
A typical approach might involve:
- 1–2 years expenses in cash
- 3–5 years in defensive assets
- Remainder in growth investments
2. Manage fees carefully
Lower fees improve sustainability over long retirements. Even a 0.5 percent fee reduction can add tens of thousands of dollars over two decades.
Check:
- Administration fees
- Investment fees
- Performance fees
- Insurance premiums inside super
3. Consider downsizing later
Housing equity can improve flexibility if needed. Some retirees do not downsize immediately but keep it as a later option if spending pressure increases.
4. Adjust spending dynamically
Reducing withdrawals after poor market years improves outcomes. Some retirees simply delay travel or large purchases rather than permanently cutting lifestyle.
5. Review pension eligibility regularly
Changes in assets can affect eligibility. Even small changes in financial assets can move pension entitlements slightly over time.
6. Consider part‑time work if retiring early
Small income can materially extend capital life. Even $8,000–$12,000 per year can meaningfully reduce drawdown pressure.
What If You Retire Earlier Than 67?
Retiring at 60 means funding several years before Age Pension eligibility.
Example scenario:
- Withdraw ~$38,000 annually
- Seven years until pension age
- Balance may fall toward ~$350,000–$420,000 depending on returns
This can still work, but usually requires:
- Careful spending control
- Possible part‑time income
- Willingness to adjust lifestyle if markets fall
Is $600,000 Enough for a Couple?
For homeowner couples, $600,000 combined usually supports a modest retirement when combined with a part Age Pension.
Typical structure:
- ~$27,000 super drawdown
- ~$28,000–$32,000 Age Pension
- ~$55,000–$60,000 total income
Couples benefit from shared housing costs but face higher healthcare and grocery costs. Many aim for $700,000–$800,000 for greater flexibility.
Aged Care and Later‑Life Costs
Later retirement years often bring different costs that are not always visible in early retirement budgets. While many retirees focus on the first 10 years of retirement, costs often change more significantly after age 80.
At this stage, retirees may also face home care support services, higher ongoing medical costs or residential aged care accommodation payments.
Residential aged care can involve either a Refundable Accommodation Deposit (RAD), often between roughly $300,000 and $700,000 depending on location and facility, or a Daily Accommodation Payment (DAP) which is paid from income instead of a lump sum.
Many retirees ultimately rely on housing equity to fund this stage if required. This is one reason advisers often suggest avoiding excessive early withdrawals where possible.
At the $600,000 level, this doesn’t mean retirement is unworkable. It simply reinforces why flexibility matters and why many retirees avoid drawing down too quickly in early retirement.
Comparison With Other Retirement Balances
Each additional $100,000 increases drawdown by about $4,500 but may reduce pension eligibility.
At $700,000:
Super drawdown: ~$31,500
Age Pension: ~$10,000–$15,000
Total: ~$42,000–$46,000
At $800,000:
Super drawdown: ~$36,000
Minimal pension
Total: ~$36,000–$40,000
Next in this series
If you have slightly less, read Can I Retire on $500,000 in Australia?
If you have more, see Can I Retire on $700,000 in Australia?
Helpful Resources
Government resources:
- Moneysmart Retirement Planner: Government retirement calculator
- Services Australia Payment and Service Finder: Calculate Age Pension entitlement
- myGov: Access Centrelink, ATO, Medicare in one place
Super fund tools:
- Most industry funds offer retirement calculators
- AustralianSuper Retirement Forecaster
- Aware Super Retirement Planner
Professional advice:
- Licensed financial advisers
- Services Australia Financial Information Service (free appointments)
Frequently Asked Questions
Will I qualify for Age Pension with $600,000?
Many homeowners may receive a part pension depending on total assets. Eligibility depends on both the assets test and income test, and small changes in financial assets can slightly change payments.
Is $600,000 enough for a couple?
It can be enough for some couples, especially homeowners with modest spending expectations, but it usually provides less flexibility than many expect. Couples often target higher balances to improve travel and healthcare flexibility.
Can I retire earlier than 67?
Possible but requires lower withdrawals or part‑time income. Retiring early increases the number of years your super must support you before Age Pension eligibility.
Should I see a financial adviser?
Professional financial advice can help optimise pension eligibility, investment structure and withdrawal strategy. Advisers can also help structure pension phase income and manage sequencing risk.
What if markets fall early?
Reducing discretionary spending and using defensive assets may help. Retirees with cash reserves are often better positioned to avoid selling growth assets at low prices.
Small Improvements That Can Make a Meaningful Difference
At this balance level, small financial decisions can have a noticeable impact over time.
Examples include:
- Delaying retirement by even 1–2 years to reduce drawdown pressure
- Reducing total super fees by 0.3–0.6 percent
- Avoiding large early retirement purchases
- Keeping withdrawal increases modest after strong markets
- Reviewing insurance inside super to remove unnecessary cover
None of these changes are dramatic individually, but together they can materially improve long‑term sustainability.
$600,000 Retirement Scorecard
| Category | Verdict |
|---|---|
| Modest lifestyle | ✅ Yes |
| Comfortable lifestyle | ⚠️ Possible with discipline |
| Early retirement (60) | ❌ Higher risk |
| Renter | ⚠️ More challenging |
| Single homeowner | ✅ Achievable |
| Couple homeowners | ⚠️ Modest lifestyle |
| Regional living | ✅ More sustainable |
| Sydney/Melbourne | ⚠️ Tighter budget |
Overall, $600,000 provides more flexibility than lower balances, but outcomes still depend heavily on spending discipline, investment behaviour, and pension interaction. Incremental improvements in savings or costs can still make a meaningful difference.



