Geelong Advertiser

Don’t let your super slip away

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JAPANESE organisati­onal expert Marie Kondo has made tidying up a hot topic, and it could be filtering through to our finances.

In the last quarter of 2018, 66,000 Australian­s tidied up their super, and they’re collective­ly $860 million better off.

Kondo’s central maxim is that we should only hang on to things that spark joy. But before spending time reorganisi­ng your sock drawer, it’s worth channellin­g some energy into sorting out your super.

Finding lost money always feels good, and there’s a mammoth $17.5 billion pool of forgotten super gathering dust and waiting to be claimed.

More than a third of Australian­s hold two or more super accounts, so there’s every chance some of it could belong to you.

The remarkable thing about these unclaimed accounts is that some are worth a small fortune. One NSW account has a balance of $2.2 million.

Tracking down lost super is getting easier all the time. Just link your myGov account to the Australian Taxation Office’s online services, and you can view all your superannua­tion accounts including any you may have lost track of.

If it turns out you have some unclaimed super, it makes sense to roll the balance into your main fund. Just check if you could be up for exit fees (these will be banned from 1 July 2019), or whether the fund includes any insurance cover that you want to hold on to.

A different type of “lost” super could affect a far greater number of Australian­s. I’m talking about money that can be lost to high fees being siphoned from your super year after year.

You could be paying well below 1 per cent annually in fund fees. Or you could be forking out over 2 per cent. The difference really stacks up over time. A 30-year-old could lose $200,000 of their total retirement savings to fees if their super is invested in a high fee fund.

Don’t wait for your annual super statement to arrive. Visit your fund’s website and get to know what you’re paying in fees. There’s a handy online super calculator on the MoneySmart website that shows the long term impact of fees on your super balance. If you don’t like what you see, think about switching to a lower fee fund. — Paul Clitheroe is chairman of InvestSMAR­T, chairman of the Australian Government Financial Literacy Board and chief commentato­r for Money Magazine.

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