Your questions for George Cochrane

By George Cochrane
Updated August 23 2012 - 12:13pm, first published August 12 2012 - 3:00am
Illustration: Phil Carrick
Illustration: Phil Carrick

I am a single male with no dependents who will turn 60 in October. I work full time, earning $119,500. I have about $360,000 in superannuation, some shares worth about $70,000 and $20,000 in cash. On the other side of the ledger, I have two loans secured against my house - the mortgage of $175,000 and another of $7000, which was to buy a car and will be paid off in a year. My strategy in the past few years has been to salary sacrifice as much as possible and pretty much have the bigger loan on an interest-only basis with a view to building the super up as much as possible, so that when I am 65½ I can retire, pay off the house and live on the super and a part age pension. With this in mind, I have been paying about $45,000 a year into super (including my employer's 9 per cent). With the budget changes I will have to reduce the salary sacrifice; what do I do with what will now become take-home pay? Should I make after-tax contributions to super or pay down the mortgage? The latter seems to me to be the better course as I understand

Subscribe now for unlimited access.

$0/

(min cost $0)

or signup to continue reading

See subscription options

Get the latest Dubbo news in your inbox

Sign up for our newsletter to stay up to date.

We care about the protection of your data. Read our Privacy Policy.