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Creating a retirement plan begins with determining your long-term financial goals and tolerance for risk, and then starting to take action to reach those goals. The process can begin anytime during your working years, but the earlier, the better.

Make a retirement plan

Work out your living costs

Claim government benefits

From age 67 (or earlier, if born before 1957), you may be eligible for government benefits such as:

Age Pension

The main income support payment for people who have reached Age

Pensioner concessions

These concessions are available through the Pensioner Concession Card (PCC) and the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card (CSHC).

Health care benefits

The individual pays a premium to the insurer and the insurer offers financial protection against healthcare expenses to the individual in return.

Tax offsets

Check whether you will receive a tax offset and how to calculate it. About tax offsets Find out how tax offsets can reduce the tax you pay.

FAQs

What is the retirement planning?

Retirement planning is the process of setting financial goals and creating a strategy to achieve them before and during retirement.

What is the 7% rule for retirement?

The 7 percent rule is a key concept in retirement planning that suggests you can withdraw 7 percent of your retirement savings annually without running out of funds

Why is a retirement plan?

Retirement planning is a step-by-step process that involves evaluation of your financial goals, risk appetite, existing savings, current income & expenses and possible investment avenues that can help you achieve you financial goals post retirement.

hat are the first three steps of retirement planning?

What are the first steps of retirement planning? Assessing your financial situation, identifying goals, and making an actionable plan are key first steps in retirement planning.