Here is the average Australian superannuation balance at ages 45, 55, and 65

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Superannuation balances can vary enormously from person to person, depending on income, career breaks, investment choices, and extra contributions.

But averages still give us a useful guide.

Looking at ages 45, 55, and 65 shows how super can build through the later stages of working life, and whether Australians are getting closer to the level needed for retirement.

How do you compare to the average? Let’s find out.

First, what is the end goal?

Before looking at the averages, it helps to understand what those balances are supposed to fund.

According to the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA), a comfortable retirement requires around $630,000 in super for a single person and $730,000 for a couple. This assumes the retiree owns their home outright and receives some Age Pension support over time.

A comfortable retirement is not about living extravagantly. It is about having enough money for private health insurance, a reliable car, regular leisure activities, household repairs, domestic travel, and the occasional overseas trip.

A modest retirement requires far less, at around $110,000 for singles and $120,000 for couples. But this lifestyle is much more constrained and relies heavily on the Age Pension.

With that in mind, the average balances at 45, 55, and 65, according to recent data, tell an interesting story.

The average superannuation balance at 45

At age 45, the average Australian woman is likely to have approximately $130,000 in superannuation, while the average Australian man is likely to have around $170,000.

This is the stage where super starts to become more noticeable. The balance is no longer insignificant, but it may still feel a long way short of what is needed for retirement.

That is completely normal. At 45, most people still have two decades or more before Age Pension age. The priority is not whether the balance is enough today, because it almost certainly is not. The priority is whether the account is set up to keep growing.

This is often a good age to review investment options, check fees, consolidate any old accounts, and consider whether extra contributions are possible.

The average super balance at 55

By age 55, the numbers have usually moved materially higher.

The average Australian woman is likely to have roughly $220,000 in super, while the average Australian man is likely to have about $290,000.

This is where retirement planning starts to feel more personal. The finish line is not right around the corner, but it is close enough that decisions begin to matter more.

For many Australians, the 50s can be a powerful decade for superannuation. Incomes may be higher, mortgage pressure may have eased, and compulsory employer contributions are being added to a larger balance.

The key point is that a balance at 55 is not the final result. There is still time for contributions and investment returns to make a meaningful difference.

The average super balance at 65

By age 65, superannuation is usually front and centre.

The average Australian woman is likely to have around $360,000 in superannuation, while the average Australian man is likely to have approximately $425,000.

For couples, combining two average balances can put retirement much closer to ASFA’s comfortable benchmark. For singles, the average balance is more likely to sit somewhere between modest and comfortable, depending on housing, spending needs, health, and access to other assets.

This is why averages need to be treated carefully. A homeowner with low expenses may feel comfortable on less than someone renting or carrying debt. Two people with the same super balance can have very different retirement experiences.

Foolish takeaway

The average super balance at 45 is likely to be around $130,000 for women and $170,000 for men. By 55, that rises to around $220,000 and $290,000. By 65, it increases again to roughly $360,000 and $425,000.

Those numbers are useful, but they are not the whole story.

What is important is not whether your balance matches the average. It is whether your super, combined with the Age Pension and any other assets, can support the retirement you actually want.

The post Here is the average Australian superannuation balance at ages 45, 55, and 65 appeared first on The Motley Fool Australia.

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Motley Fool contributor James Mickleboro has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia’s parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.