Can you really retire on $500,000 of super in 2026?

The benchmark says you need more. The Age Pension might have other ideas.

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There is a number that haunts Australian retirement planning. For years it was $1 million. Now it is the ASFA benchmark. Either way, the message lands the same: you are probably behind.

So when your superannuation balance reads $500,000, it is easy to assume the answer is no.

But that headline figure hides something important.

The benchmark everyone quotes assumes you fund your entire retirement yourself. Most Australians do not.

A boy's eyes pop wide open as he calculates something on his abacus.

Image source: Getty Images

The benchmark only tells half the story

The Association of Superannuation Funds of Australia (ASFA) says a single homeowner needs about $630,000 in super for a comfortable retirement, while a couple needs roughly $730,000. Those targets buy a genuinely good lifestyle: private health cover, a reasonable car, the odd holiday, and regular dinners out.

On paper, $500,000 falls short of the single figure.

Here is the part the benchmark quietly builds in. Those numbers already assume you receive a part Age Pension on top of your own drawdown. The pension is not a backstop you hope to avoid. It is baked into the maths.

And it is more generous than many people expect. From 20 March 2026, the maximum single rate is around $31,200 per year, while a couple can receive close to $47,000 combined, including supplements.

That changes the conversation entirely.

Single or couple changes everything

This is where $500,000 splits into two very different stories.

A single homeowner with $500,000 sits above the full-pension assets threshold of $321,500, but well below the part-pension cut-off of $722,000. They would draw a part Age Pension, then top it up from their super. Combine a sensible drawdown with that pension and the result lands comfortably above a modest lifestyle, though still shy of the full comfortable benchmark.

A couple with $500,000 between them is a different picture. Their combined balance sits just above the full-pension assets threshold of $481,500. That points to close to the full couple Age Pension, plus drawdown from their super. Together, that can push annual income within striking distance of the comfortable couple standard.

Same balance. Two outcomes. The difference is simply who is drawing on it.

The real variable is you

Numbers like these are starting points, not verdicts.

Owning your home outright matters enormously, because rent in retirement can swallow a large share of any budget. Retiring at 67 rather than 60 matters too, since every early year is a year you fund alone before the pension begins.

Then there is the question only you can answer. What does your version of comfortable actually cost?

Some retirees are content below the ASFA comfortable line. Others want more travel and more margin for the unexpected. $500,000 can stretch a long way for one person and feel tight for another.

The case for aiming higher

None of this is an argument to stop at $500,000.

A larger balance is not about luxury. It is a margin of safety. The cost of living rarely moves backwards, and a bigger buffer absorbs the steady climb in groceries, energy, and healthcare without forcing you to cut back.

The years before you finish work can be the most powerful stretch of your investing life. Invest well through them, and over the long run the share market has rewarded those who stay the course.

The Foolish takeaway

So, can you retire on $500,000 of super in 2026?

For some Australians, the honest answer is yes, with help. The Age Pension does far more heavy lifting than the headline benchmarks suggest, especially for couples who own their home.

It may not fund a luxurious retirement, and markets will never move in a straight line. But comfortable and secure is well within reach for plenty of people sitting on this balance.

The figure that matters is not the one the headlines fixate on. It is the income your super and the pension generate together, set against the life you want to live.

$500,000 is not the finish line everyone fears. For some, it is already enough.

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.

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