Account-Based Pension Calculator
Estimate your retirement income with our advanced account-based pension calculator. Compare scenarios and plan your financial future.
Your Pension Projection
Comprehensive Guide to Account-Based Pension Calculators in Excel
Planning for retirement requires careful consideration of your financial resources, and an account-based pension (ABP) is one of the most popular retirement income streams in Australia. This guide will walk you through everything you need to know about account-based pensions, how to calculate them, and how to create your own calculator in Excel.
What is an Account-Based Pension?
An account-based pension (also called an allocated pension) is a regular income stream purchased with your superannuation savings when you retire. Unlike defined benefit pensions, the income you receive from an ABP depends on:
- The balance of your superannuation account
- The investment performance of your funds
- The amount you choose to withdraw each year
- Applicable fees and taxes
Key Features of Account-Based Pensions
| Feature | Account-Based Pension | Transition to Retirement Pension |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum Age | Retirement age (preservation age) | Preservation age (55-60) |
| Work Status | Retired or semi-retired | Still working (reduced hours) |
| Minimum Withdrawal | 4% of balance (age-based) | 4% of balance |
| Maximum Withdrawal | No limit | 10% of balance |
| Tax on Earnings | 0% in retirement phase | 15% (not in retirement phase) |
| Tax on Payments | Tax-free (over 60) | Taxed at marginal rate (15% offset) |
How Account-Based Pension Calculations Work
The basic formula for calculating your annual pension payment is:
Annual Pension = (Pension Percentage × Account Balance) / 100
However, real-world calculations are more complex because they must account for:
- Minimum withdrawal requirements – The Australian government sets minimum drawdown percentages based on your age:
| Age | Minimum % (2023-24) | Minimum % (2024-25) |
|---|---|---|
| Under 65 | 4% | 4% |
| 65-74 | 5% | 5% |
| 75-79 | 6% | 6% |
| 80-84 | 7% | 7% |
| 85-89 | 9% | 9% |
| 90-94 | 11% | 11% |
| 95+ | 14% | 14% |
Source: Australian Taxation Office – Retirement Income Streams
- Investment returns – Your balance grows or shrinks based on market performance
- Fees – Administration and investment fees reduce your balance
- Indexation – Your pension may increase annually with inflation (CPI) or a fixed percentage
- Tax implications – Different tax treatments apply depending on your age and pension type
Building an Account-Based Pension Calculator in Excel
Creating your own calculator in Excel allows you to model different scenarios. Here’s how to build a basic version:
Step 1: Set Up Your Inputs
Create input cells for:
- Current age
- Retirement age
- Initial super balance
- Annual contribution (if any)
- Expected investment return (%)
- Pension percentage (%)
- Fees (%)
- Indexation method (CPI/fixed/none)
Step 2: Create Annual Calculation Table
Set up columns for each year with these calculations:
=Previous Balance * (1 + Investment Return - Fees) + Contributions - Pension Payment
Step 3: Add Age-Based Minimum Withdrawals
Use Excel’s IF or LOOKUP functions to apply the correct minimum percentage based on age:
=IF(AND(Age>=65, Age<=74), 5%, IF(AND(Age>=75, Age<=79), 6%, ...))
Step 4: Implement Indexation
For CPI indexation, you'll need to:
- Add a CPI increase percentage (e.g., 2.5%)
- Multiply the previous year's pension by (1 + CPI%)
- Ensure the new amount meets minimum requirements
Step 5: Add Charts for Visualization
Create line charts showing:
- Account balance over time
- Annual pension payments
- Cumulative payments vs remaining balance
Advanced Considerations for Your Calculator
For more accurate projections, consider adding:
- Sequence of returns risk - Model different market scenarios (good years vs bad years)
- Longevity risk - Calculate probabilities of outliving your savings
- Inflation adjustments - Show purchasing power in today's dollars
- Tax calculations - Model different tax treatments for different ages
- Partner considerations - Include reversionary pension options
- Estate planning - Show remaining balance for beneficiaries
Common Mistakes to Avoid
When using or creating pension calculators:
- Overestimating returns - Be conservative with investment return assumptions (historical averages are ~7% before inflation)
- Ignoring fees - Even 1% in fees can significantly reduce your balance over time
- Forgetting about inflation - $50,000 today won't buy the same in 20 years
- Not accounting for taxes - Different pension types have different tax treatments
- Underestimating life expectancy - Many people live well into their 90s
- Not stress-testing - Always run "what-if" scenarios with market downturns
Alternative Retirement Income Strategies
Account-based pensions aren't the only option. Consider:
- Annuities - Provide guaranteed income for life (but less flexibility)
- Hybrid approaches - Combine ABPs with annuities for security
- Bucket strategies - Segment savings by time horizon
- Home equity release - Use your home to supplement income
- Part-time work - Gradually transition to retirement
Government Resources and Tools
For official information and calculators:
- MoneySmart - Account-Based Pensions (Australian Government)
- ATO Retirement Planner (Official calculator)
- Services Australia - Age Pension (For eligibility and rates)
When to Seek Professional Advice
While calculators are helpful, consider consulting a financial advisor if:
- You have a large super balance (>$1.6m, affecting transfer balance cap)
- You have complex family situations (blended families, dependents)
- You own a business or have significant assets outside super
- You're considering transition to retirement strategies
- You want to optimize Centrelink/Age Pension eligibility
- You're unsure about investment options within your pension
Frequently Asked Questions
How is an account-based pension taxed?
For most people over 60:
- Investment earnings in the pension phase are tax-free
- Pension payments are tax-free (if from a taxed super fund)
- No capital gains tax when selling assets to fund payments
For transition to retirement pensions (under 65 and still working), different tax rules apply.
Can I contribute to my account-based pension?
No, once you've started an account-based pension, you generally cannot make further contributions to that account. However, you can:
- Keep contributing to an accumulation account
- Start a new pension with additional funds later
- Consider a transition to retirement pension if still working
What happens to my pension when I die?
You can nominate beneficiaries to receive:
- Reversionary pension - Continues to your dependant (spouse/child)
- Lump sum payment - Paid to your estate or beneficiaries
- Combination - Partial pension, partial lump sum
Tax may apply to non-dependant beneficiaries receiving lump sums.
How does the Age Pension affect my account-based pension?
Your account-based pension is assessed under the income test and assets test for Age Pension eligibility. The rules are complex, but generally:
- Only 60% of your pension income is counted under the income test
- The full account balance is counted under the assets test
- Different rules apply before and after Age Pension age
Use the Services Australia calculator for personalized estimates.
Can I change my pension payments?
Yes, with account-based pensions you can:
- Increase or decrease payments (within minimum requirements)
- Make lump sum withdrawals
- Temporarily stop payments (though minimum drawdowns still apply)
- Switch between regular payments (monthly, quarterly, annually)
Transition to retirement pensions have stricter rules on maximum withdrawals (10% of balance per year).