Here are some tips for retiree Australians (and their families and friends) as we kick-off 2020:
1. If you are turning 66 this year, make a diary note to look closely at an age pension application 12 weeks before the actual birthday. This gives time to address any hiccups well in advance of your first payment being due. You should have some idea of whether you are eligible for the age pension, and the payment should form part of spending plans.
2. If you are turning 66 this year, and think you are not eligible for the Centrelink age pension, make sure you know exactly why, so you can get ready to apply if things change. You may even be wrong.
3. If you are turning 66 this year, and you are not eligible for the Centrelink age pension, then apply for the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card. This card is income tested and could save you more than $2,500 a year on healthcare costs.
4. If you think you were not eligible for the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card, check again. Low income returns on investments and changes in deeming rates mean that your eligibility may have changed. Unlike the Centrelink age pension, you can only apply for this once you reach age pension age. Something to do on your 66th birthday!
5. If you are already receiving a part pension, make sure Centrelink is up to date with the right data. For part pensioners, a change in assets of $1,000 means an extra $78 per year in age pension payments. Check the right value for the car or caravan is in the system, and household contents are realistically valued. These assets are means tested. Your savings may have changed due to a holiday, renovation or medical emergency. Make contact and increase your pension.
6. If you receive an age pension, make sure you are receiving these five entitlements:
- Gas Rebate
- Electricity Rebate
- Water Rebate
- Council Rate Discount
- Driver’s License and Registration Concession
7. If you are applying for the Centrelink age pension, apply for the entitlements above as soon as you receive your Pension Concession Card. (Hopefully on your birthday - because you started application three months beforehand!)
8. If you are in the situation of (6) and (7), keep searching for entitlements, concessions, rebates, programmes or whatever they are called. In my list I have more than 40 and counting. Policies change, governments try and get re-elected, budgets have announcements - it’s a moving feast. Everything from replacement appliances, fishing licenses, pet registration, and stamps. And from all levels of government. Oh yes - in different departments in the different levels of government too. There are so many, there’s work to do here.
9. If you are part of a couple, make sure you are registered for the Medicare safety net as a family or couple. This is something most people set up when they first get married but things can change a lot over time. With access to Concessional Medicare Safety Net thresholds as a holder of a Pensioner Concession Card or the Commonwealth Seniors Health Card, this one is a no-brainer.
10. If Christmas with the family has got you thinking about aged care, learn about it before it happens. You will be grateful for some basic knowledge. The Government Aged Care portal, myagedcare.gov.au has good resources to get you started. Look at local aged care providers. What are the costs? Are the assets of your parents organised enough to be called on to fund aged care? Can they be re-organised? June 30 this year is your deadline to make use of a financial year to sell assets, and then sell again the next day to reduce the cost of capital gains tax.
11. If you are trying to work out how your savings are going to last, try the ASIC Moneysmart Retirement Planner. It's much better than many of the services provided by for-profit companies as it includes age pension eligibility and works this out over time.
12. Check how your spending compares to the ASFA Retirement Standard. This is a great tool for reviewing how your spending in retirement might look if things are going well, or if you have to tighten your belt.
13. If you are in NSW and hold a Commonwealth Seniors Health Card, apply for the Seniors Energy Rebate. If you have already applied, don't expect to get it again next year. You will have to re-apply. Governments make announcements, hide the application forms, then make you search again the next year to get the same benefit. Play the game!
14. If you are in NSW, hold a Commonwealth Seniors Health Card or receive an age pension, and live in a regional area, get ready for the $250 Regional Seniors Travel Card. Applications open from 29 January.
15. If you are 66 or over and still working, don't assume the Centrelink age pension is irrelevant. For someone with a small amount of savings and a low-income job, there is a potential benefit. Here is how to get the full experience of how confusing it is: Work out your age pension eligibility, crunch the numbers on SAPTO, add a dash of LITO, stir in some Work Bonus - and then take this result to try and work out the right number of hours to work so you are not giving away 50% of your savings by forfeiting the pension via the income test. Sound confusing? It’s one of the most baffling situations one can come across and those with low incomes and small savings are the ones hit with an effective 50% tax rate. Don’t start me.
16. Travelling by public transport in NSW? If you want to make the most of government transport help, take a look at the following: Pensioner OPAL Card, Pensioner Travel Vouchers, Country Pensioner Excursion Tickets and Regional Excursion Daily (RED) Tickets. Got all that? Hopefully you have more time to plan when you are retired.
17. If your investments are hard to track, hard to organise, or you cannot link your investment strategy to your retirement plans, it might be time to consolidate and simplify. There is a link between asset allocation strategies and expected returns. ASIC explains it here. Use these expectations, an understanding of spending and availability of government support as the basis of long-term retirement spending plans. A long-term plan should be easy to hang your hat on. Allow for unexpected changes, such as medical emergencies, aged care, sudden yearning for travel, urgent house upgrades and maintenance, bailing out a child … the list is endless.
18. If you own property and need a top up for your day-to-day living expenses, the Pension Loans Scheme may be right for you. The interest rate has dropped to 4.5%. If you are eligible for the Centrelink age pension at $0, maybe you can apply for a loan even if you are a self-funded retiree. This may suit people with illiquid assets that stop them from getting an age pension, who may be cashflow poor. People with income streams that prevent them getting the age pension (via the income test) may also apply for a top up. It’s a scheme for everyone.
19. If you want to understand how the Pension Loans Scheme could work for you, start playing with the Money Smart Reverse Mortgage Calculator. Change ‘Lender and Product’ to ‘Other (no loan restrictions)’ and set the borrowing plan to ‘fortnightly payment’. It’s still not super clear - but it is better than anything else you will find. (Why are these government tools so hard to find?)
20. If you are feeling a bit hopeless about how hard it is to get properly organised, read this. In 2014, Joe Hockey needed four Treasury officials and a few weeks to work out what every Australian turning 66 must grapple with. There is no manual, no list, no comprehensive website.
But it's well worth the effort.
Brendan Ryan is a financial adviser and Founder of Later Life Advice. This article is for general information purposes only and does not consider the circumstances of any person.