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How Much Should You Have Saved by 60?

Australian savings, super, and net worth benchmarks for age 60. See where you stand and how to catch up if you're behind.

Last verified: 5 May 2026

Australians aged 60: the full distribution

ABS, APRA and ATO data, CPI-adjusted to 2026 Q1. 7 years until the standard retirement age of 67.

Median savings vs. Australians aged 60
Top 50%
$106,000
$7,600
$36,800
$106,000
median
$278,000
$536,000

Right around the middle.

Median super vs. Australians aged 60
Top 50%
$386,000
$38,000
$181,000
$386,000
median
$756,000
$1,208,000

Right around the middle.

Median net worth vs. Australians aged 60
Top 50%
$760,000
$148,000
$336,000
$760,000
median
$1,460,000
$2,620,000

Right around the middle.

Super at 60 vs Retirement Target

Median super at 60$386,000.00
ASFA Comfortable Target (at 67)$690,000.00

The median person at 60 has reached 56% of the ASFA target. With employer SG contributions and compound growth over 7 years, this gap can close — but topping up helps.

You're on track if...

  • You have at least $106,000.00 in accessible savings (the median for your age).
  • You have 3-6 months of living expenses set aside as an emergency fund.
  • Your super balance is at or above $386,000.00.
  • Your total net worth (savings + super + property equity - debts) is above $760,000.00.

You might be behind if...

  • Your savings are below $36,800.00 and you don't have an emergency fund.
  • Your super balance is below $181,000.00.
  • You have significant consumer debt (credit cards, personal loans) relative to your income.
  • Your super is well below the ASFA comfortable retirement target of $690,000 and you haven't started catching up.

How to Catch Up at 60

1.

Start with an emergency fund: aim for 3 months of expenses in a high-interest savings account.

2.

Automate your savings with a direct debit on payday — even $50/week adds up to $2,600/year.

3.

You can make catch-up concessional super contributions if your balance is below $500,000 (unused cap from prior years).

4.

Consider downsizer contributions — if you sell your home after age 55, you can contribute up to $300,000 to super.

5.

Review your retirement timeline. Even working 1-2 extra years can significantly increase your super balance.

6.

Check your Age Pension eligibility — it can supplement your super income in retirement.

Savings Benchmarks by Age

AgeSavingsSuperNet Worth
Age 45$65,000.00$140,000.00$380,000.00
Age 50$80,000.00$200,000.00$500,000.00
Age 55$90,000.00$270,000.00$600,000.00
Age 60 ← You$100,000.00$350,000.00$700,000.00
Age 65$110,000.00$400,000.00$750,000.00

Sourced from

3 primary sources
  • ATO-Tax-Rates-2026ATO Guidance
    Resident tax rates 2025-26 (Stage 3 in effect)

    0–$18,200 nil; $18,201–$45,000 16c; $45,001–$135,000 30c; $135,001–$190,000 37c; $190,001+ 45c. Plus 2% Medicare levy.

  • ASFA-Retirement-StandardASFA Retirement Standard
    ASFA Retirement Standard — comfortable & modest budgets

    Comfortable retirement target: ~$595k (single) / ~$690k (couple) lump sum at 67, generating ~$53k/$74k annual income alongside the Age Pension.

  • Services-Australia-Age-PensionServices Australia
    Age Pension — assets and income tests

    Means-tested. Lower of income test or assets test applies. Pension age is 67. Family home generally exempt from assets test; super in accumulation phase exempt below age pension age.

Want the full picture?

Money Mirror takes 30 seconds and benchmarks your salary, super, savings and weekly spend in one place — your numbers carry across every other calculator.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much should I have saved by 60 in Australia?

By age 60, the median Australian has approximately $106,000.00 in accessible savings. A good target is $278,000.00 or more. This excludes superannuation and property equity.

How much super should I have at 60?

By age 60, the median super balance is approximately $386,000.00. A good position would be $756,000.00 or more. You have 7 years until the standard retirement age of 67.

What should my net worth be at 60?

The median net worth for Australians around age 60 is approximately $760,000.00, including super, property equity, and savings minus debts. A strong position is $1,460,000.00 or above.

Am I behind on savings at 60?

If your total savings are below $36,800.00 and you don't have an emergency fund, you may be behind. However, everyone's situation is different — if you've been investing in property, super, or education, your overall financial position may still be strong. Use the Money Check tool for a full assessment.

General information and estimates only — not financial, tax, or legal advice. Always verify with a licensed adviser or the ATO.