Retirement is rarely the single, steady chapter people imagine. In reality, it unfolds across four distinct phases, each with its own rhythm, priorities, and costs. Getting your head around this shift is one of the most powerful things you can do to protect your lifestyle and avoid running out of money at the wrong moment.
This is the “go-go” phase. You’re healthy, energetic, and ready to do everything you may have postponed during your working life, including travel, dining out, hobbies, and family experiences. Spending here often exceeds pre-retirement levels.
The ASFA Retirement Standard (December quarter 2025) estimates that homeowners aged 65 and over now need $77,375 annually for a comfortable retirement as a couple, and $54,840 annually for a comfortable lifestyle for single homeowners. This is the stage to spend intentionally.
Activity naturally slows. Travel becomes less frequent, big-ticket discretionary spending eases, and the focus shifts to comfort and connection. Discretionary costs naturally decline as retirees move into the passive stage, and while health costs increase, for most, these are offset by government subsidies and reduced spending in other areas.
This is often where retirees underspend, haunted by the fear of running out of money, a mistake that can leave hard-earned savings unenjoyed.
Spending patterns shift again as health and care needs rise. Home modifications, allied health services, and potentially residential aged care costs come into focus. With Australians living well into their 80s, on average 81.1 years for men and 85.1 years for women, retirement income often needs to stretch much longer than many initially plan. Residential aged care involves both a means-tested daily care fee and accommodation costs, which require careful advance planning.
This is the often-overlooked fourth dimension: what you leave behind. Estate planning, superannuation beneficiary nominations, and tax-effective wealth transfer strategies become critical here, including the tax treatment of super death benefits for non-dependents.
A great adviser doesn’t just model how long your money will last; they help you spend it confidently across each stage. Specifically, advisers can help:
The retirement spending journey isn’t a flat road; it’s a changing landscape. The good news? With the right map, every stage can be navigated with confidence.
| Stage | Age range | Focus | Spending |
|---|---|---|---|
| Stage 1: Active years | ~65–74 | Travel, leisure, and lifestyle spending are at their peak. The “go-go” years. | High |
| Stage 2: Passive years | ~75–84 | Slower pace and reduced discretionary costs. Comfort and connection matter most. | Moderate |
| Stage 3: Care years | ~85+ | Health and care costs increase. Home support or residential aged care may be needed. | Rising again |
| Stage 4: Legacy years | Ongoing | Estate planning, super nominations, and tax-effective wealth transfer take centre stage. | Varies |