The nature of retirement is changing and so are the rules. If you want to reduce your working hours or even pay less tax without sacrificing your income, a transition to retirement pension could be the answer.
Longer life expectancies mean many Australians are spending more time in retirement than ever before1 – increasing the burden on our social security system and emphasising the importance of accumulating superannuation.
As a consequence, the Government is encouraging us to remain in the workforce beyond the traditional retirement age.
Did you know that you can access your superannuation while you are still working?
Using a transition to retirement pension you can generally access between 4-10 per cent of your super balance, as long as you’ve reached your preservation age (between 55 and 60 depending on the year you were born) and you are still working, up to age 65.
A transition to retirement strategy allows you to supplement your income by drawing a regular pension payment from your super fund.
There are a few ways you can benefit:
- continue to work full-time but reduce your tax by taking a pension and salary sacrificing some of your income into super
- moving from full-time work to part-time work and replacing lost salary with income from the transition to retirement pension,
- as a business owner/operator, you could use a pension to supplement your income needs in quiet times.
A transition to retirement pension may also help reduce your overall tax bill while boosting your total super balance before you retire.
This is how it works. You contribute part of your salary to super (where it is generally taxed at just 15 per cent2 rather than at your marginal tax rate). You then move your super money into a tax-free ‘transition to retirement’ pension and use the pension income to supplement your reduced salary. The tax-effectiveness of the pension will help lower your overall personal tax liability.
Preservation age
Under current superannuation law you must reach your preservation age before you can access your super. Your preservation age depends on the date you were born.
Date of birth | Preservation age |
Before July 1960 | 55 |
1 July 1960 – 30 June 1961 | 56 |
1 July 1961 – 30 June 1962 | 57 |
1 July 1962 – 30 June 1963 | 58 |
1 July 1963 – 30 June 1964 | 59 |
After 30 June 1964 | 60 |
- Australian institute of Heath and Welfare – mortality data
- The contributions tax rate is up to 30 per cent for individuals with income over $300,000 pa. This may lower the amount of concessional contributions that can be split.
The diagram below will give you an idea of how your money moves when using this strategy:
Things to consider
Non commutable income stream
Your transition to retirement pension income stream is non-commutable apart from any unrestricted non-preserved components within it.
Non-commutable means you can’t convert the income stream into lump sum cash until you satisfy a full condition of release from super, such as retirement or turning 65.
Your transition to retirement pension will work in a similar way as a standard superannuation pension, subject to the non-commutable requirements and restriction on the amount of pension you can withdraw. You can withdraw between 4 per cent and 10 per cent of the pension account balance each year and have the flexibility to vary the payment at any time during the year, within these set ranges.
You should also keep in mind the possibility of your career not going exactly to plan – a redundancy or a forced or unplanned early retirement once you’re over 55 could interrupt this strategy and mean that you will have to review your circumstances with your financial adviser.
Another important point to consider is the concessional contributions cap. From 1 July 2014, the concessional contribution cap is $35,000 for those aged 49 or over on 30 June 2014. This will remain the same for the 2015/16 financial year.
If you plan to use this strategy through a self-managed superannuation fund, you should ensure that the trust deed is drafted broadly enough to allow you to commence any pension allowed under super law.
Taxation
Once you have reached age 60, your pension payments and any lump sum withdrawals will generally be tax-free. A financial adviser can help you to structure your pension to legally minimise your tax obligations.
Note about salary sacrificing: Although salary sacrificing into superannuation is a great strategy for increasing your retirement savings, not all employers offer this feature to their employees. Also, under these arrangements your salary decreases and this could have a flow-on effect to other employment benefits you receive — e.g. compulsory SG contributions may be determined using actual (reduced) salary and may not take into account salary sacrifice contributions.
From 1 July 2012 high income earners earning over $300,000 per annum are subject to contributions tax rate of 30 per cent. This is referred to as Division 293 tax.
How does the transition to retirement strategy work?
Ted, who is 57, has a salary of $80,000 per annum (plus 9.5 per cent superannuation). He wishes to continue to receive his current net income but maximise the effectiveness of his super. He currently has $350,000 in superannuation and decides to commence a transition to retirement pension.
As the table below illustrates, with the transition to retirement strategy without changing his cash income received, Ted has still saved over $3,862 in tax.
If Ted continues to work after age 60, the amount withdrawn from his superannuation is tax-free. In the table below, Ted’s tax savings increase by more than $7,862.
Gross earnings are 6.5% pa in a superannuation and pension account. Salary sacrifice and 9.5% SG contributions are taxed at 15% in super.
Alternatively, Ted could boost his wife Danielle’s super. After salary sacrificing and choosing to take an account-based pension, Ted can take part of the contributions he has salary sacrificed to his super and split them into Danielle’s account each financial year (as Danielle hasn’t permanently retired).
This gives Danielle’s super a boost and means they can both make use of all the tax incentives available.
This example has been calculated using the 2014/15 income tax.
Current position | With TTR Under 60 | With TTR age 60 and over | |
Salary | $80,000 | $63,000 | $63,000 |
9.50% SG contributions | $7,600 | $7,600 | $7,600 |
Salary sacrifice contributions | $0 | $27,000 | $27,000 |
Tax paid plus Medicare levy (less offsets) | $19,147 | $13,927 | $9,627 |
TTR Pension | $0 | $21,000 | $17,000 |
Net cash | $60,853 | $60,073 | $60,373 |
Superannuation asset end | $379,210 | $383,072 | $387,072 |
Increase in super with strategy | $0 | $3,862 | $7,862 |
Speak to your financial adviser for more information.