Now Trump’s in charge, here’s how to safeguard your super

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There is now more than $16 billion in lost and unclaimed super money in Australia; once it becomes “unclaimed”, it also starts earning a pittance as it is no longer viably invested.

A quick look at your ATO profile on myGov will reveal if you have misplaced any money. You can also compare super fund performance then easily consolidate into one winning fund. Which brings us to the next step.

O: Optimise the system

I believe we are so lucky in Australia that 11.5 per cent is saved for us by our employers for our retirement. But there are ways to ensure extra money goes into your fund either for free or for less.

A program called the superannuation co-contribution allows eligible Aussies to collect a bonus up-to $500 in super from the government every year. To be eligible, you need to earn under $60,400 a year (and you need to be earning in some respect).

Then, provided you pay in $1000 after tax in a financial year, only slightly more than $19 a week, the government will automatically put the $500 on top.

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The next enormous way to work the system is brilliant if your household has unequal salaries – one spouse earning a higher amount and another earning below $40,000, say because they’ve put career on hold for kids. (They don’t have to be working at all.)

Here, an after-tax spouse contribution of $3000 nets the payer as much as a $540 tax offset. This is a straight-up tax discount so not only does great things for the spouse whose super is suffering, but it also gives the family a nice budgetary boost.

And deserving of its own “way-to-work-the-system” category, the final step in this strategy.

S: Salary sacrifice

When you pay money into super before tax, you swap your marginal tax rate of up to 47 per cent – including the Medicare Levy – with a super contribution tax rate of only 15 per cent.

That means you immediately make more of your money – a higher amount is straightaway invested than you would get in the hand. This is why, all other things being equal, it’s mathematically better to put money into super than onto the mortgage.

You can make such before-tax contributions either by arranging with your employer to salary sacrifice directly into super, or by what’s called a personal deductible contribution.

The latter involves paying after-tax money into super, but then converting it to before tax by filling out an “intent to claim” form with your fund that allows you to deduct the contribution from your assessable income when you file your income tax return.

Incidentally, this is a great way of reducing capital gains on an asset sale. The massive advantage of paying (or snaring) extra money into your super fund when prices are low is that you buy more shares/units. Then, when markets inevitably go up, you have more of these to grow.

An investment concept called dollar cost averaging shows that regularly investing like this turns volatility into opportunity. And that’s about the best anyone can hope for in these unprecedented investment times.

Nicole Pedersen-McKinnon is author of How to Get Mortgage-Free Like Me, available at www.nicolessmartmoney.com. Follow Nicole on Facebook, X and Instagram.

  • Advice given is general in nature and is not intended to influence readers’ decisions about investing or financial products. They should always seek their own professional advice that takes into account their own personal circumstances before making any financial decisions.

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