Your questions: assessing retirement options

By George Cochrane
Updated September 24 2012 - 12:08pm, first published 11:15am

I have just retired at age 57. My total retirement benefit will automatically be rolled over into my fund's retained benefit section with the $235,000 in the defined portion going into the cash option and the additional $240,000 benefit into the balanced option. My wife and I have around $1 million outside super, and at present we can get at least 5 per cent interest. Our top tax rate would be 20.5 per cent (nearly all our income this year will be from interest), giving us a minimum of 3.975 per cent net. Should I withdraw money from super in order to get a better return? My wife, 60 and retired, has $235,000 in a super account. By the time she reaches age-pension age, if we have upgraded our house for the future and been able to change from naturally thrifty to spendthrift, our assets may have been eroded sufficiently to make her eligible for a small age pension. As there will be a four-year period when my super would be excluded from the assets test, will the fact that I have retired make it assessable for age-pension purposes? Also, I have shares in BlueScope and Qantas, neither paying dividends. Any suggestions what to do with them? E.B.