
Most Australians check their superannuation and focus on one thing: the balance.
That makes sense because it is the number staring back at you from the app or annual statement. It feels like the scoreboard. Higher is better, lower is worse, and anything below the average can feel like bad news.
But the uncomfortable truth is that your super balance is not the only number that matters in retirement planning. In many cases, it may not even be the most useful one.
The number that matters more is how much income that balance can realistically support.
A big superannuation balance can still feel small
It is easy to assume that reaching a large super balance will automatically make retirement feel comfortable, but that is not always the case.
A person with $500,000 in superannuation and high spending needs may feel far more financially stretched than someone with $350,000, a paid-off home, low expenses, and a modest lifestyle.
That is why retirement planning should not begin with the question: “How much do I have?” It should begin with a more practical question: “How much will I need each year?”
Once you know that, your super balance starts to make far more sense.
Retirement is a cash flow problem
During your working life, income usually arrives through wages or a salary. In retirement, that income has to come from somewhere else. It may come from super drawdowns, investment income, the Age Pension, savings, or a combination of all of them.
That means your superannuation is not just a nest egg. It is a future pay packet, and like any pay packet, what is important is whether it can cover the life you want to live.
According to the Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia, a comfortable retirement requires around $630,000 in super for a single person and $730,000 for a couple, assuming home ownership and some Age Pension support.
Those numbers are useful, but they are only estimates of the capital needed to support a particular lifestyle.
Comfortable means choices
A comfortable retirement is not extravagant. It is not about luxury travel every month or spending without limits. Instead, it is about choice.
It means having the flexibility to eat out, run a reliable car, maintain private health insurance, replace household items when needed, visit family, and take occasional holidays without every decision feeling financially loaded.
By contrast, a modest retirement can still be workable, but it usually involves more compromise. The bills may be paid, but there is less room for mistakes, surprises, or indulgences.
This is why income is so important. It determines whether retirement feels flexible or fragile.
What to do instead
A better way to assess your superannuation is to work backwards.
Start by estimating the annual income you would like in retirement. Then consider how much of that could come from the Age Pension, if you are eligible. From there, your super only needs to fill the gap.
This approach can be far less intimidating than chasing a giant headline number.
It also makes the task more practical. If the gap is too large, you can respond by increasing contributions, reviewing investment options, reducing fees, delaying retirement, or adjusting expectations.
Foolish takeaway
Your superannuation balance is important, but it is not the whole story.
The real question is not whether your balance looks impressive on paper. It is whether it can help generate the income you need for the retirement you want.
In retirement, wealth is not just measured by what you have saved. It is measured by how comfortably that money lets you live.
The post The Australian superannuation number that is more important than your balance 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.