Navigating the balance between super and investments in retirement is an important consideration for plenty of Aussies.
Within their investment mix, retirees must also able to generate passive income through dividends without ignoring capital growth.

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Why dividend yields aren't the only factor
While passive income is an appealing goal for retirees, making it the sole focus of a portfolio can actually undermine long-term financial security.
Chasing high-yield investments often means concentrating in sectors like REITs, utilities, or other dividend stocks.
This can reduce diversification and expose the portfolio to significant capital losses if those sectors fall out of favour.
More importantly, a retiree at 65 today may live another 25 to 30 years, meaning inflation remains a genuine threat.
A portfolio generating strong income today but delivering little capital growth can slowly erode real purchasing power over time.
Balancing income with growth gives retirees a larger asset base to draw from, more flexibility during market downturns, and a better chance of not outliving their money.
The goal, ultimately, isn't just to generate cash flow, it's to sustain a comfortable lifestyle for retirement.
This goal can be achieved through a simple two fund portfolio.
The growth engine
The iShares S&P 500 ETF (ASX: IVV) tracks the S&P 500, giving you exposure to 500 of the world's largest companies.
This includes Apple Inc (NASDAQ: AAPL), Nvidia Inc (NASDAQ: NVDA) and hundreds more.
Over the past 10 years, the fund has delivered roughly 15% annualised returns.
For retirees with a 20-to-30-year time horizon (longer than most people assume), maintaining growth exposure is essential to prevent inflation eroding your purchasing power.
At a management fee of just 0.04% per annum, IVV ETF is one of the cheapest ways to own global growth.
Your income stream
Where IVV builds wealth, the Betashares Australian Dividend Harvester Fund (ASX: HVST) pays the bills.
The fund is specifically designed to provide high levels of dividend income to ASX investors.
This ETF targets high dividend-yielding global equities, with distributions that have historically run above 7% per annum.
That's meaningful passive income you can use to supplement your superannuation pension payments – without selling down assets during volatile markets.
The superannuation complement
Australian retirees already have a built-in foundation of diversification through their super fund, which typically holds Australian equities, bonds, property, and infrastructure.
This means your outside-super portfolio doesn't need to replicate that complexity.
IVV ETF adds international growth exposure that your super may underweight, while HVST ETF provides an income buffer during drawdown years.