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Before You Retire NZ — Financial Checklist

Updated

Retirement in New Zealand is more financially complex than many people realise — even with KiwiSaver and NZ Super in place. The decisions you make in the 12–24 months before you retire significantly affect how much income you’ll have and how long your savings will last.

Quick answer

The key pre-retirement tasks are: confirm your KiwiSaver withdrawal plan (accessible at 65 regardless of employment status), apply for NZ Super 2–3 months before turning 65, review your will and beneficiaries, understand your drawdown strategy, and calculate whether NZ Super + KiwiSaver income covers your expected spending.

1. KiwiSaver — Withdrawal Rules at 65

KiwiSaver becomes accessible at age 65 (the NZ Super eligibility age), regardless of whether you’re still working.

KiwiSaver withdrawal ruleDetail
Minimum age65
Minimum membership5 years (if you joined before 65)
Lump sum or regular withdrawalsYour choice — no forced drawdown
Employer contributionsContinue if you keep working after 65, but you can also opt out
Government contributionStops at age 65
Tax on withdrawalsNone — KiwiSaver withdrawals are tax-free

If you’re under 65 and want to access KiwiSaver early, this is only possible under specific hardship or serious illness provisions.


2. Apply for NZ Super

NZ Super is available to NZ residents aged 65 and over who have lived in NZ for at least 10 years since age 20 (5 of those years must be after age 50).

NZ Super rate (2026, weekly, after tax)Amount
Single person, living alone~$520/week
Single person, sharing accommodation~$479/week
Couple, both qualify~$800/week (combined)
Couple, one qualifies~$752/week (combined — partner included rate)

Apply 2–3 months before your 65th birthday at Work and Income (workandincome.govt.nz). Payments start from your 65th birthday — not the application date.

NZ Super is taxable income. Your tax code for NZ Super (usually M or M SL) is set when you apply.


3. Calculate Your Retirement Income

Build a simple retirement income calculation:

Income sourceWeekly (example)Annual
NZ Super (single, living alone)$520$27,040
KiwiSaver drawdown ($300k over 20 years)$288$15,000
Rental income (if applicable)
Part-time work (if applicable)
Total$808/week$42,040

Compare this to your expected spending. Use our Retirement Calculator NZ to model your specific numbers.

NZ average retirement spending: Approximately $700–$900/week for a single person, $1,000–$1,400/week for a couple (no mortgage).


4. Decide Your KiwiSaver Drawdown Strategy

There is no obligation to withdraw all your KiwiSaver at 65. Your options:

StrategyWhat it means
Leave it investedKiwiSaver funds remain invested and grow (or fall) — draw as needed
Regular scheduled withdrawalsSet up monthly or quarterly withdrawals from your fund
Full lump sumWithdraw everything at once (risky — tax-free but cash may be poorly invested)
Partial withdrawal + remainder investedMost common approach

Fund choice matters at retirement: Many people switch to a conservative or balanced fund near retirement to reduce volatility risk. Talk to a financial adviser or your KiwiSaver provider about the transition.


5. Review and Update Your Will

If you don’t have a will, make one before you retire. If you have one, review it:

  • Does it reflect your current wishes?
  • Have circumstances changed (divorce, remarriage, death of a beneficiary)?
  • Is your executor still able and willing?
  • Does it account for your KiwiSaver (KiwiSaver passes outside your will to your nominated beneficiary — update this separately with your provider)

Without a will in NZ, your estate is distributed under the Administration Act — which may not match your wishes.


6. Update Beneficiary Nominations

These pass outside your will:

  • KiwiSaver: Update nominated beneficiary directly with your provider
  • Life insurance: Confirm beneficiary is current
  • Workplace superannuation (if any): Review with scheme

7. Healthcare Planning

Public healthcare in NZ is broadly free, but retirement healthcare costs can include:

CostNotes
GP visits~$20–$50 per visit (reduced for over-65s via CSC in many cases)
Community Services Card (CSC)Income-tested — many NZ Super recipients qualify; reduces GP and prescription costs
Prescription costs$5 per prescription (reduced with CSC)
Private health insurance$80 – $250+/month; premiums rise significantly after 65
Aged care / rest home$1,100 – $1,500/week; means-tested government subsidy available

Community Services Card: Apply when you apply for NZ Super. Many NZ Super recipients qualify — it reduces GP and prescription fees significantly.

Residential Care Subsidy: If you need to move to a rest home, the government subsidises the cost once your assets are below certain thresholds (currently around $284,000 in a couple and $50,000 for a single person; own home usually excluded if partner still lives there).


8. Power of Attorney

Set up an Enduring Power of Attorney (EPA) for:

  • Property: Allows someone to manage your financial affairs if you cannot
  • Personal care and welfare: Allows someone to make healthcare decisions if you cannot

An EPA must be set up while you are mentally capable — it cannot be done after incapacity. Cost: $400–$800 through a lawyer.


9. Relationship Property and Superannuation

If you’re in a relationship, discuss:

  • How KiwiSaver and savings will be split between you both
  • Whether your partner is also applying for NZ Super
  • What happens financially if one of you dies first
  • Property ownership — is the family home jointly owned or solely owned?

The Property (Relationships) Act 1976 makes most relationship property 50/50 after 3 years of cohabitation.


10. Debts — Clear Before Retiring If Possible

Entering retirement with debt is manageable but significantly reduces your financial flexibility:

Debt typePriority to clearNotes
MortgageHigh — if possibleA paid-off home significantly reduces living costs
Car loanHighClear from KiwiSaver or savings if possible
Credit cardsUrgentHigh interest; clear before stopping work
Student loanAutomatic — cleared at death; pause repayments when income drops

Final Checklist Summary

  • KiwiSaver withdrawal plan decided and fund type reviewed for retirement
  • NZ Super application submitted (2–3 months before 65th birthday)
  • Retirement income calculated and compared to expected spending
  • Will reviewed and updated
  • KiwiSaver beneficiary nomination confirmed
  • Life insurance beneficiaries confirmed
  • Enduring Power of Attorney set up
  • Community Services Card applied for
  • Healthcare costs budgeted for
  • Relationship property position understood
  • High-interest debts cleared
  • Mortgage status reviewed