Couple-Unit Retirement Optimiser

Most Couples Retire at Different Times.
Every Other Calculator Misses This.

Other calculators do one of two things: assume you both retire on the same day, or model each partner in isolation. Neither gets the household income right. SuperCalc Pro is the only calculator we've found that models a couple as a joint unit — optimising combined income across every phase of a staggered retirement.

Dr. Dennis Jensen PhD
Engineered by Dr. Dennis Jensen (PhD, Former Federal MP) CSIRO & DSTO Scientist · 98 years of Australian market data · 1,000+ Monte Carlo simulations
Model Our Phased Retirement — Free See how it works

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Most
couples retire at different times
Varies
income difference — depends on your specifics
None
found that model this as a couple unit
98 yrs
real Australian market data to stress-test against

Why Other Calculators Get Phased Retirement Wrong

Other calculators do one of two things: assume both partners retire simultaneously, or model each person independently. Both approaches miss the joint interactions — the ongoing income from the working partner, the shared Age Pension means test, and the optimal super draw sequence across the household. Getting these wrong can mean tens of thousands of dollars a year in missed income.

❌ Other calculators

Either assume simultaneous retirement — or model each partner in isolation

  • Type A: Ask "when do you retire?" as a single date for both partners
  • Type B: Run each partner through a separate calculator independently
  • Neither captures the working partner's ongoing salary and contributions
  • Neither models the joint Age Pension means test correctly
  • Neither optimises whose super to draw first across the household
  • Neither shows household income through each transition phase
  • Result: a single projected number for a multi-phase, two-person reality
✓ SuperCalc Pro

Models the couple as a joint unit — the only calculator we've found that does this

  • Each partner has their own age, super balance, and retirement date
  • Working partner's salary and contributions are tracked year-by-year
  • Age Pension eligibility modelled separately for each partner, then combined
  • Runs 1,000+ Monte Carlo scenarios across all phases simultaneously
  • 98 years of historical crashes applied to the couple's combined portfolio
  • Identifies the optimal draw sequence (whose super first and why)
  • Shows household income through every phase in a single view

Your Retirement Isn't a Single Event. It's a Sequence of Five.

When partners retire at different times, a couple typically passes through five distinct income phases. Each has different income sources, tax treatment, and super draw logic. Standard calculators model one. SuperCalc Pro models all five simultaneously.

1

Dual Income — both partners working

Maximum accumulation. Both contributing to super. Standard calculators handle this fine. The complexity starts when the first partner stops.

Both contributing
2

First retirement — one working, one drawing super

The critical gap phase. Partner A draws from super to cover their share of expenses; Partner B's salary continues (and their super keeps growing). Standard calculators either ignore this phase or assume both have stopped.

Mixed income Most calculators miss this
3

Both retired — pre-Age Pension

Both partners drawing super; neither yet eligible for Age Pension. Draw rate and balance management is critical here — running out before 67 is the most common planning error.

Super-only income
4

Mixed pension eligibility — one on Age Pension, one not

The first partner reaches 67. Now the still-younger partner's super or income is assessed in the couple's joint means test, creating complex interactions that can reduce or eliminate the pension entitlement.

Joint means test active Most calculators miss this too
5

Both on Age Pension — full retirement income

Both partners receiving Age Pension, supplemented by super drawdowns. The draw-down strategy in phases 2–4 directly determines how much super remains to top up pension income here.

Full retirement income

How SuperCalc Pro Compares

Other calculators either assume simultaneous retirement or treat each partner independently. Here's what that means in practice, feature by feature.

Feature Other calculators (simultaneous or independent) SuperCalc Pro
Different retirement ages per partner Single date for both Full year-by-year per partner
Working partner's salary during gap years Ignored entirely Tracked and compounded year-by-year
Ongoing super contributions during gap Not modelled Employer + salary sacrifice + voluntary
Age Pension means test (joint assessment) Individual only, or ignored Joint means test, phase-by-phase
Separate preservation age per partner Single assumption Per-partner, auto-calculated
Super draw sequence optimisation Not available Model whose super to draw first
Monte Carlo stress-testing across all phases Not available 1,000+ simulations per run
98 years of historical crash testing Not available 1928–2025 real market data
Year-by-year household income view Single projected number Full table: income, balance, pension per year
Transition to Retirement (TTR) modelling Not modelled Available for working partner

The Same Couple. Two Very Different Answers.

Here's what happens when you run the same scenario through a standard calculator versus phased retirement modelling.

Scenario: 5-Year Retirement Gap

Partner A
Age 60 · Retiring now
Super: $500,000
Desired income: $40,000/yr
Partner B
Age 55 · Retiring at 60
Super: $300,000
Salary: $80,000/yr (5 more years)
Goal
Combined income: $60,000/yr
Retirement period: 30 years
Survive a 1929-style crash
Standard Calculator Result
$44,000/yr
Combined balance assumed: $800K (both retired today)
  • Assumes both retire at 60 simultaneously
  • Ignores Partner B's 5 years of contributions
  • Misses the $50K+ added to combined super
  • Underestimates Age Pension timing benefit
  • Gap to target: −$16,000/yr
Phased Retirement Result
$57,000/yr
Modelled correctly as a phased, optimised unit
  • Phase 1–5 years: Partner A draws $30K; Partner B works
  • Partner B adds ~$55K to combined super over 5 years
  • Combined super at Year 6: ~$855K
  • Age Pension eligibility phased correctly per partner
  • Gap to target: −$3,000/yr (vs −$16K standard)
+$13,000/yr

In this specific example: the same couple, the same super, modelled correctly vs incorrectly. Your result will differ based on your ages, balances, and retirement timing.

Run Your Own Couple's Scenario — Free

2 free runs on the Advanced Calculator. No signup. Your numbers stay in your browser.

Model My Phased Retirement

Everything the Phased Retirement Model Includes

Per-partner inputs

Age, super balance, salary, target retirement age, and voluntary contributions entered separately for each partner.

Year-by-year household income

See every year: who is working, what each partner draws from super, what Age Pension each receives, and combined household income.

1,000+ Monte Carlo simulations

Applied to both partners simultaneously, across all five phases. See your household survival odds at the income you actually want.

98 years of historical stress-testing

1928–2025. Great Depression, 1987, GFC, 2020. See if the phased retirement plan survives the worst decades in Australian market history.

Age Pension joint means test

Assets and income tested together for the couple, with per-partner eligibility tracked as each reaches 67. No other free tool does this.

Draw sequence optimisation

Test drawing from Partner A's super first vs Partner B's. See the income and balance difference over 30 years. Identify the optimal sequence.

Frequently Asked Questions

What exactly is "phased retirement"?
Phased retirement is when partners in a couple retire at different times rather than simultaneously. One partner might retire at 60 due to health, redundancy, or preference while the other continues working until 65 or 67. Staggered retirement is the majority scenario for Australian couples — yet we haven't found a mainstream calculator that models it correctly for the couple as a unit.
Why does phased retirement change the income picture so much?
Because the couple's income passes through five distinct phases, each with different income sources, tax treatment, and super draw interactions. The still-working partner continues accumulating super; the retired partner is drawing it down. The Age Pension means test applies to the couple jointly, so one partner's income directly affects the other's pension entitlement. Optimising these interactions as a unit — rather than treating each partner individually — can materially change the household income picture. How much depends entirely on your ages, super balances, salary, and retirement timing. Which is exactly why you need to model your own numbers, not rely on a generic estimate.
How do I use the Phased Retirement mode?
Open the Advanced Calculator, select "Couple" and then enable "Phased Retirement". Enter each partner's current age, super balance, target retirement age, and (for the still-working partner) salary and contribution details. The calculator does the rest: it runs all five phases simultaneously and shows you year-by-year household income, balance, and Age Pension outcomes. You get 2 free runs — no signup required.
What's the difference between this and MoneySmart's calculator?
MoneySmart is a single-person, single-date calculator. It asks when you retire and gives you a projected balance. From our testing, it does not model: different retirement ages per partner; ongoing contributions from a working partner; joint Age Pension means testing; per-partner preservation age; historical crash stress-testing; or Monte Carlo probability analysis. SuperCalc Pro's Advanced Calculator models all of these simultaneously for a couple, using 98 years of real market data.
Is this financial advice?
No. SuperCalc Pro is an educational modelling tool. It helps you understand how different retirement timing choices could affect your household income. It is not a substitute for advice from a licensed financial adviser. The numbers it produces are projections based on historical data and Monte Carlo simulations, not guaranteed outcomes.
How many free runs do I get?
You get 2 free anonymous runs on the Advanced Calculator with no signup required. After that, you can unlock 1 more free run by providing your email address, giving you 3 runs total to fully explore your phased retirement scenario before deciding whether to subscribe.

Most Couples Are Planning Phased Retirement Without the Right Tool.
See If Yours Holds Up.

Model your actual retirement — staggered, optimised, stress-tested against 98 years of Australian market data. 2 free runs. No signup. No data stored.

Model Our Phased Retirement — Free
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