Financial adviser Craig Sankey answers your superannuation and other finance questions each week, and today looks at a pension product that goes by many different names but does the same thing.
What is a flexi pension? Should I do this before I turn 67?
What is in a name?
Most people convert some or all of their superannuation accumulation funds to what is known as an account-based pension.
This is sometimes also referred to as an allocated pension, or a superannuation income stream.
Now the product providers themselves put a label their products to differentiate their product from others, even though most of them are very similar.
For example:
By moving your funds from accumulation to a pension account you can then have regular tax-free income paid to you from your super.
Not only that, but all internal earnings within a pension account are tax free.
Therefore, these accounts are even more tax effective than regular superannuation accumulation accounts, which tax earnings at 15 per cent.
That is why there is a limit on how much you can transfer into a pension account, currently $1.9 million.
From an age pension perspective, once you turn age pension age it makes no difference whether you keep funds in super, transfer them to an account- based pension, or put the funds in a bank account.
When you are in a pension account, you can still access all of your money at any time.
However, you do have to draw down a minimum each year. This is a percentage of your account at the start of the financial year, based on your age, as shown in the table below.
I am planning to retire in the Philippines because of the lower cost of living. My wife and I were both born in Australia. Will our leaving Australia permanently make us ineligible for an Australian old age pension?
To qualify for the age pension (you can drop the ‘old’), residency requirements must be met.
You must be in Australia at the time of applying for a payment, and an Australian resident for 10 years or more.
Some exemptions may apply. This includes claiming under an international agreement.
Australia has international social security agreements with 31 countries (but does not include the Philippines).
If you then leave Australia for long periods (or permanently) you can still be paid the age pension, however, the following applies:
Further information on payments rates when moving overseas can be found here.
Can I combine super funds? Currently we have two in a certain fund, one in my name and one in my wife’s, and another in my name only. I am wanting to combine all three into the one in my name only. We are both in our 80s.
You can certainly combine super funds that are in your name into one.
There are a few ways to go about this.
Firstly, if you have a MyGov login and have the ATO linked, then it’s simply a matter of a couple of clicks.
Alternatively, your preferred super fund, the one where you want to combine all the funds into, will be able to assist. They will have an online or paper form, or if you simply call them up, they will help to arrange this.
However, you cannot combine your wife’s super into yours. The way the superannuation system is set up, each individual has their own fund, and they can’t be rolled over into another name.
If you were under 75 funds could be withdrawn and then recontributed back into another person’s name, within certain caps.
But as you are now in your eighties it is not possible to recontribute the funds to super.
Craig Sankey is a licensed financial adviser and head of Technical Services and Advice Enablement at Industry Fund Services.
This column also appears in our sister publication The New Daily.