Financial PlannersNews Family Financial Plan

Family Financial Plan: Empower Your Future Today

Families in Australia today face complex financial decisions. Rising living costs, shifting tax rules, volatile housing markets, and uncertain superannuation returns all mean that a clear financial plan is no longer optional—it is essential. A well-developed family financial plan helps align priorities, safeguard against unexpected shocks, and build wealth with discipline. This article explores why families should invest in financial planning, what elements to evaluate, and the common mistakes to avoid.

Why a Family Financial Plan Matters

A financial plan is more than a budget—it is a roadmap that brings together income, expenses, assets, liabilities, and goals into one coordinated strategy. For families, this means:

  • Clarity and direction: Parents can prioritise saving for a home, children’s education, or retirement without feeling constantly pulled in different directions.

  • Preparedness for surprises: Medical emergencies, job loss, or sudden expenses like a wedding can derail finances without forward planning.

  • Intergenerational stability: Families can ensure not only their own retirement security but also support for their children without compromising financial health.

A 2022 survey by the Financial Planning Association of Australia found that 73% of Australians with a written financial plan reported higher financial wellbeing compared to just 29% without one.

Read more
NewsRetirement Planning Downsizing Before Retirement

What Are The Pros and Cons of Downsizing Before Retirement

“Downsizing Before Retirement” generally refers to selling your current primary residence (often a large family home) and moving into something smaller, easier to manage, less expensive to run, or better located for retirement needs. This could be:

  • Moving from a full house to a smaller home, townhouse or apartment
  • Moving to a retirement village or over-55s community
  • Choosing a dwelling with fewer maintenance requirements, or closer to services, family, or transport

In Australia, there is also a policy dimension (the Downsizer Contribution Scheme) which allows eligible people (aged 55+) to contribute up to $300,000 from the sale of their home into superannuation, bypassing certain contribution caps. (Nationwide Super | Small Business Super)

The potential benefits of downsizing before retirement

Here are the main advantages, with data or widely reported findings where possible.

Read more
Financial PlannersNewsSuperannuation Fund Superannuation Fees

Are Your Superannuation Fees Too High?

Superannuation is central to Australia’s retirement system. With more than $3.9 trillion in assets under management as of March 2025, superannuation funds play a critical role in providing financial security for millions of Australians. But while the system has grown into one of the largest retirement savings pools in the world, many Australians are losing a significant portion of their retirement nest eggs to fees.

High superannuation fees remain one of the most overlooked threats to long-term wealth creation. Even small percentage differences can compound over decades into losses of hundreds of thousands of dollars. Understanding how these fees work, who benefits from them, and how to reduce their impact is essential for both current retirees and younger Australians planning for retirement.

Read more
Financial PlannersNews Financial Foundation

How to Build a Solid Financial Foundation

Financial stability doesn’t happen by accident. For Australians, building a strong financial foundation is one of the most reliable ways to reduce stress, prepare for life’s unexpected events, and work toward long-term goals such as home ownership, education, or retirement. The techniques that form this foundation—budgeting, cash flow management, emergency savings, and income growth—are simple in concept but powerful in practice.

This article explains these techniques in detail, highlights common pitfalls such as lifestyle inflation, and shows how financial advisors can help Australians put them into action.

Read more
Financial PlannersNews build wealth

Can Eliminating Debt Help You Build Wealth?

We provide a full range of financial planning services to our Perth clients, but one of the first questions we ask if you plan to build wealth, is about your level of debt. At Approved Financial Planners, the road to effective financial planning begins with taking charge of your debt and monthly expenses.

We can help you set up debts such as credit cards, student loans, leases, mortgages and personal loans in a way that helps you minimise interest payments that could be spent towards securing your future.

Debt isn’t always bad, but when it drags on without a plan, it can severely hinder wealth-building. Getting rid of the wrong debt changes your financial landscape: more cash flow, less risk, more freedom to invest, save, and plan for the future.

Types of Debt: Personal vs Income-Producing Debt

To set a foundation, it’s crucial to distinguish between personal (or consumer) debt and income-producing debt. The difference matters:

Read more
Financial PlannersInvestment PlanningNews Property Investors

What Should New Property Investors Watch Out For

Investing in real estate often feels simultaneously attractive (tangible asset, potential for rent and capital gains) and scary (big sums, risk, uncertainty). For new Property Investors in Australia, the fears are real, backed by data. Below, I discuss the main concerns, evidence for them, and how to reduce their impact through good planning and professional help.

1. Property Investors Fear Overpaying (“FOOP”)

What people fear

  • Paying too much for a property relative to its intrinsic or future value.
  • Getting caught in bidding wars or auction environments where emotion or competition drives price above what is reasonable.
  • Buying in a location that’s overpriced (because of recent hype) and becoming saddled with negative equity if prices correct.
Read more
Financial PlannersNews Financial Planning

Does Financial Planning Provide Psychological Benefits

Financial planning is often seen mainly as numbers, spreadsheets, superannuation, investments, maybe tax or estate matters. But there is growing evidence—both in Australia and internationally—that a structured, intentional financial planning process brings psychological benefits: less stress, more life satisfaction, better resilience.

One foundational work is Kym A. Irving’s “The Financial Life Well-Lived: Psychological Benefits of Financial Planning” (2012, Queensland University of Technology). Irving argues that the process of financial planning (not just the end result) activates key psychological mechanisms such as sense of control, environmental mastery, competence, goal achievement, which all contribute to subjective well-being. (uowoajournals.org)

Below I’ll explain how each of the standard steps in financial planning can produce psychological benefit, referencing Irving and other research, and then interpret what this means for everyday Australians.

Read more
Estate PlanningFinancial PlannersNews Estate Planning

Is it Time to Think about Estate Planning?

Many people assume that having a will is sufficient estate planning. But in Australia, a will is only one part of a broader, more complex set of decisions. Not fully planning can lead to legal uncertainty, family conflict, tax inefficiencies, loss of asset value, and an emotional burden on loved ones.

Below are key reasons to begin estate planning proactively:

  • Avoiding intestacy: If you die without a valid will (or with an outdated or invalid will), your estate enters intestacy. That means your assets are distributed under laws you did not choose. In Western Australia, for example, around 42% of people either don’t have a will or aren't sure whether they do. (Solomon Hollett Lawyers)
  • Outdated wishes: Many people who do have wills do not feel they are up to date. In a major Australian survey, about half of adults with wills felt their wills did not fully reflect their current wishes. (Charles Sturt University Research Output)
  • Incapacity and decision-making: It’s not just death. Many people do not plan for what happens if they are incapacitated (due to illness, dementia, or accident). Having powers of attorney, advance care directives etc. can make a significant difference. For instance, the “Estate Planning in Australia” survey found that relatively few people have arranged durable powers of attorney or equivalent arrangements, and even fewer have guardianship arrangements for children. (Charles Sturt University Research Output)
  • Emotional cost & family stress: Unclear instructions, surprise distributions, disputes among heirs—these all impose emotional distress. Loved ones may be unsure of what their relative would have wanted, or may be left to deal with a legal and financial mess, precisely at times when grief and shock make decision-making hard.
  • Financial cost & value lost: Delays, legal challenges, probate or administration overhead, mismanagement—all can erode estate value, sometimes significantly.
Read more
Financial PlannersNewsSuperannuation Fund Splitting Superannuation

Splitting Superannuation Contributions with Your Spouse

Splitting Superannuation (also called contribution splitting) is a strategy that allows one spouse (or de facto partner) to transfer (in effect) part of the super contributions (before-tax/concessional contributions) made in a financial year into the other spouse’s super account.

  • The key idea is not splitting the current super balance, but splitting certain contributions made in the past financial year. (Australian Taxation Office)

  • This is different from super under family law splitting, which refers to dividing superannuation interests as part of a separation or divorce settlement. That is a legal process under the Family Law Act. But contribution-splitting is done during ongoing relationships (or after, but usually before separation), for strategic retirement planning. (Canstar)

Read more
Financial PlannersInvestment PlanningNewsRetirement Planning Clear Investment Goals

Why It’s Important to be Clear on Investment Goals

In today’s uncertain global economy, knowing exactly what you want from your investments has never been more important. The financial environment is evolving quickly. Shifts in global power such as the rise of BRICS, the growing influence of cryptocurrencies, the strong performance of gold and silver, and renewed interest in mining stocks all add layers of complexity to investment decisions. At the same time, persistently low interest rates on cash savings force investors to rethink where they put their money.

Being clear on your investment goals is not about predicting the future. It’s about aligning your financial choices with your values, time horizon, and risk tolerance—so that no matter what happens globally, you stay on track.

Read more