“I wish I’d known all this earlier.” It’s a phrase I regularly hear after presenting a financial plan to new clients. It’s rarely ‘too late’ but proactive planning for the future is often the biggest advantage you can harness.
At 45 retirement still seems far off, by 55 it feels very real. Many reach their mid-50s with a super target in mind but little clarity on how they want to live, full-time work, part-time, consulting, travel or supporting family.
Financial strategy isn’t just about what you do, it’s also about when you do it. The same conversation at 55, 60 or 65 can lead to very different outcomes even with similar income, super balances and lifestyles.
It’s not about choosing the perfect investment or timing the market. More often it’s about conversations that happen too late. How much is enough, what retirement should look like, balancing lifestyle with security and how super, tax and work choices interact over time.
Contribution and tax strategy: shaping the balance vs managing the result
At 55
Superannuation strategy is still about building positioning. There’s time to deliberately shape outcomes through concessional strategies, catch‑up contributions, spouse strategies and timing around work transitions. Mistakes can be corrected and most importantly, good decisions compound.
At 60
Strategy becomes more selective. Contribution opportunities still exist but they are often constrained by shorter timeframes, employment changes or preservation considerations. Strategy is about maximising what’s left rather than redesigning the whole picture.
At 65
The strategy conversation becomes mostly retrospective. Super balances are largely set. The focus shifts to minimising tax, managing withdrawals and ensuring sustainability rather than materially changing the trajectory.
- At 55, strategy actively builds future flexibility.
- At 65, strategy focuses on protecting what already exists.
Sequencing goals: designing the order vs absorbing the overlap
At 55
There is still room to sequence competing goals properly. Private education costs, renovations, investing outside super and work transitions. With projections, goals can be staged so they support rather than undermine each other.
At 60
Goals start to overlap whether planned or not. Cash flow decisions tend to collide with retirement timing and trade‑offs become unavoidable. Strategy shifts from optimisation to prioritisation.
At 65
Sequencing becomes fixed, if major goals weren’t planned earlier, they either don’t happen or come at the expense of lifestyle or financial certainty. Strategic conversations focus on “Can we?” rather than “How should we?”
- At 55, sequencing creates efficiency.
- At 65, sequencing mostly determines limitation.
Investment strategy: positioning for growth vs managing volatility
At 55
Investment strategy can still meaningfully evolve. Time allows for market cycles to play out, growth assets to recover from volatility and portfolio’s structure to support long‑term objectives. Risk can be taken intentionally, not emotionally.
At 60
Investment strategy becomes more sensitive to timing and sequencing risk. Portfolios often need adjustment to reduce reliance on short‑term market behaviour and asset allocation decisions matter more because the recovery time is shorter.
At 65
Investment strategy is primarily about durability. The focus is on income sustainability, capital preservation and controlling sequencing risk, portfolio positioning becomes something to manage rather than fix.
- At 55, investment strategy drives outcome.
- At 65, investment strategy supports stability.
Same strategies. Different leverage.
What surprises many people is that the strategies themselves can be similar at 55, 60 and 65 because the principles are largely the same. What changes is the impact of those decisions. Earlier strategy shapes results while those same strategies later help to limit regret. That’s not a failure of planning it’s simply how time works.
If this raised a quiet “we should probably look at this” moment, that’s usually a sign worth paying attention to. The earlier these conversations happen, the more flexibility they tend to create.
If you’d like to understand what your choices look like at your current stage and which decisions matter the most — I’m happy to help.
