Behind on superannuation at 50? Here's what to do now

Reaching 50 with a thin balance feels like a problem. The next 15 years decide whether it stays one.

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s Premium Investing Services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn More

The cost of a comfortable retirement keeps climbing. Inflation may be cooling on paper, but cooling is not the same as falling – prices are still rising, just a little more slowly. That quiet creep matters more than most people realise.

It means the finish line keeps moving.

For Australians turning 50, that is an uncomfortable thought. Retirement is no longer an abstract idea somewhere over the horizon. It is roughly a decade until you can access your super at 60, and around 17 years until the Age Pension kicks in at 67. The window to fix things is still open. It is just narrower than it used to be.

So, where do you actually stand?

A concerned man leans against a brick wall looking up at the sky.

Image source: Getty Images

The gap hiding in plain sight

The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) puts the average super balance for a 50 to 54-year-old man at $254,071 and for a woman at $190,175. Useful as a benchmark. Sobering as a starting point.

Because the same body estimates a single homeowner now needs around $630,000 to retire comfortably at 67, while a couple needs $730,000. Those targets rose in February for the first time in three years, driven by exactly the living costs that refuse to sit still.

Line the two numbers up, and the gap is obvious. Many 50-year-olds are sitting on roughly a third of what they will eventually need.

The median tells an even starker story. More than half of Australians in their early 50s hold less than the average, because a handful of large balances drag the average upward. If you feel behind, you are in very good company.

Where the catch-up actually happens

Here is the part that gets missed. Closing the gap is not only about contributing more. It is about what those contributions earn.

A balance growing at 7% a year looks very different over 15 years to one growing at 9%. On a six-figure starting balance, that two-point difference can mean hundreds of thousands of dollars by retirement. Returns are the lever most people leave untouched.

That is why how your super is invested deserves a hard look. Many Australians sit in a default 'balanced' option without ever choosing it. A higher-growth allocation – tilted toward shares rather than cash and bonds – carries more short-term volatility, but historically the Australian share market has returned close to 9% a year over the long run, including dividends. Low-cost index exposure, through funds like the Vanguard Australian Shares Index ETF (ASX: VAS) or the iShares S&P 500 ETF (ASX: IVV), is one way some investors build that growth tilt.

Contributions still matter, and the rules are about to get more generous. From 1 July 2026, the concessional contributions cap rises from $30,000 to $32,500. If your total super balance sits under $500,000, carry-forward rules let you mop up unused cap from the previous five years in a single hit – a genuine catch-up mechanism for anyone who has fallen behind. (Higher earners should keep Division 293 in mind, and very large balances Division 296, but neither changes the core opportunity.)

Foolish Takeaway

Turning 50 behind on super is not a verdict. It is a prompt.

The maths is not kind to complacency – markets fall, and the next 15 years will not move in a straight line. However, the same maths rewards action. Slightly higher contributions, a sharper look at how your money is invested, and the simple discipline of aiming for a margin of safety above the bare minimum can reshape what 'enough' looks like.

The cost of living will keep rising. The question worth sitting with at 50 is whether your super is built to outrun it.

Motley Fool contributor Leigh Gant has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool Australia's parent company Motley Fool Holdings Inc. has positions in and has recommended iShares S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool Australia has recommended iShares S&P 500 ETF. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. This article contains general investment advice only (under AFSL 400691). Authorised by Scott Phillips.

More on Superannuation

A happy couple looking at an iPad.
Superannuation

How to invest $12,500 for passive income in superannuation?

Here are two top picks for superannuation…

Read more »

Australian dollar notes in a nest, symbolising a nest egg.
Superannuation

Why $250,000 in superannuation is not enough for a comfortable retirement

So how much do you need to sustain a reasonable lifestyle?

Read more »

Four senior friends laugh together with arms around each other
Superannuation

Payday superannuation starting 1 July could change how every Australian thinks about their retirement

Here is how the change works, what it means for your retirement, and which ASX shares could help you build…

Read more »

Two elderly people smiling with their fists pumping and with a cape on.
Superannuation

Average superannuation balance in Australia in 2026: 45 vs 65 year olds

How far are you away from the retirement of your dreams?

Read more »

Person holding Australian dollar notes, symbolising dividends.
Superannuation

How much is needed in superannuation to target a $6,000 monthly passive income?

This is what it would take to unlock $72,000 of annual passive income.

Read more »

Australian dollar notes in a nest, symbolising a nest egg.
Superannuation

How much superannuation does the average 30-year-old have, and how to give it a boost

How does your lump sum compare to the average?

Read more »

A mature-aged couple high-five each other as they celebrate a financial win and early retirement.
Superannuation

Why 30 June is the most important date for your superannuation this year

30 June 2026 is the last chance to maximise your superannuation contributions for FY26. Here's what every Australian investor needs…

Read more »

A woman holds up hands to compare two things with question marks above her hands.
Superannuation

The average Australian superannuation balance: 50 vs 60 years old

How does your superannuation balance compare to the average at these two milestone ages?

Read more »