Retirees

You’ve earned this chapter. We'll help you live it fully.

You’ve accumulated $1M+ in retirement assets and built a life you’re proud of. Retirement should feel like freedom, not a countdown.

But when every dollar you spend comes from a pool you’ve spent a lifetime building, it’s natural to want certainty.

We help retirees turn accumulated wealth into reliable income, navigate pension complexity, and make decisions about aged care and legacy with confidence.
Trusted by 5,150+ clients since 1986
The #1 question

Will it last?

That’s the question behind every financial decision in retirement. You’ve done well: a paid-off home, a healthy super balance, investments you’ve built over decades.

But the shift from adding to your wealth to drawing from it changes the entire equation. Every trip, every gift to the grandchildren, every unexpected bill comes with a quiet calculation: can I afford this without compromising what’s ahead?

The pension rules are complex. The new high-balance super tax thresholds add another consideration. And you want to help your children and grandchildren financially — first home deposits, education, experiences — but not at the expense of your own security.

You’ve worked too hard and too long to spend this chapter worrying. And with the right plan, you won’t have to.
How we help

What working with us looks like

Income that lasts the distance
We’ll structure your account-based pension, drawdown strategy, and investment allocation to generate reliable income across a 25–30+ year retirement. You’ll see, year by year, exactly how your wealth tracks — giving you the confidence to live well, not just cautiously.
Every entitlement you deserve
Assets tests, income tests, deeming rates, and gifting rules — we navigate this system every day so you don’t have to. Even with $1M+ in assets, many retirees qualify for a partial Age Pension. We’ll structure your finances to maximise every entitlement.
Aged care planning before you need it
RADs, DAPs, means testing, facility costs — quality aged care is expensive and the rules are complex. Planning ahead gives you choices about the standard of care you receive. Reacting in a crisis limits them. We’ll build a strategy while the decision is still yours to make.
A legacy that reflects your wishes
Wills, binding death benefit nominations, testamentary trusts, and power of attorney. With $1M+ in assets, your estate plan needs to be precise. We’ll work with your solicitor to make sure your wealth goes exactly where you intend — protected from disputes, tax surprises, and administrative chaos.
Learn

Frequently Asked Questions

Get to know more about us and how we can help you before you start a conversation.
How do I generate reliable income in retirement?

Retirement income can come from account-based pensions, investments, cash reserves, annuities, rental income and Age Pension entitlements. A good strategy balances income needs, tax, investment risk, liquidity and estate planning.

How much can I safely spend each year in retirement?

Safe spending depends on your assets, age, investment mix, inflation, health, life expectancy and desired estate value. Retirement modelling can test different spending levels under different market scenarios.

Should I keep money in super after retirement?

For many retirees, super remains a tax-effective retirement structure. However, decisions should consider minimum pension payments, transfer balance cap rules, estate planning and whether funds are better held inside or outside super.

What happens to my super when I die?

Super does not automatically form part of your estate unless directed appropriately. Retirees should review binding death benefit nominations, reversionary pensions, estate planning documents and tax implications for beneficiaries.

What does a financial adviser do in Australia?

A financial adviser helps you make informed decisions about your money, including superannuation, investments, insurance, retirement planning, cash flow, tax-aware structuring, estate planning considerations and long-term wealth strategy.

In Australia, personal financial advice must be provided by an authorised adviser who is listed on the Financial Advisers Register. Advisers also need to meet conduct and disclosure obligations, including acting in the client’s best interests when providing personal advice.

When should I seek financial advice?

You should consider financial advice when your financial decisions become complex, high-value or long term. Common triggers include buying a home, starting a family, receiving an inheritance, changing jobs, receiving equity or bonuses, preparing for retirement, selling a business, managing tax, or deciding how to invest surplus income.

Good advice is not just about investments. It is about creating a clear plan, understanding trade-offs and making sure decisions across tax, super, insurance, debt and estate planning work together.

How do I choose a good financial adviser?

Look for an adviser who is properly licensed, transparent on fees, experienced with clients like you, and able to explain advice clearly. ASIC’s MoneySmart recommends checking an adviser’s qualifications, experience, fees, services and whether they have any links to product providers.

A good adviser should take time to understand your goals, explain alternatives, disclose costs and risks, and give you space to make informed decisions.

What should I expect from a financial advice process?

A strong advice process usually includes discovery, goal setting, strategy development, written recommendations, implementation and ongoing review.

For personal advice in Australia, clients may receive a Statement of Advice explaining the advice, the basis for the recommendations, relevant costs, benefits, risks and any conflicts or remuneration. ASIC guidance emphasises that advice should be clear, concise and effective.

How much does financial advice cost?

The cost depends on complexity. A simple advice engagement may be relatively contained, while comprehensive advice covering superannuation, investments, insurance, retirement modelling, tax structures and estate planning coordination may cost more.

Best practice is for fees to be clear upfront, agreed in writing and linked to the scope of advice. Clients should understand whether fees are fixed, hourly, ongoing, asset-based or a combination.

Get started

Let’s talk about what’s possible

Book a zero-cost conversation with one of our expert advisers. No jargon and no pressure. Just clarity on your wealth, your goals, and your next step.
Speak to an adviser

Explore our financial planning insights & resources

Insights, tools and updates to help you plan with clarity.
Explore insights