The money question a quarter of Aussies can't answer

One in four Australians can’t answer an important question about their financial future, a new survey shows.

By AAP & CBA Newsroom

19 February 2026

Young Australian looking at his phone while sitting in a parked car. Credit: Adobe

Key points

  • A quarter of Australians cannot name their super fund, rising to 28 per cent among 18 to 34 year olds
  • Disengagement can be costly: unpaid super affects 3.3 million people and is estimated at about $6 billion a year, while multiple accounts can mean multiple fees 
  • Even small fee differences add up: paying 0.1 per cent more could leave someone $14,000 worse off at retirement, while 1 per cent more could mean $128,000 less

What's your superannuation fund?

That's the question one in four Australians cannot answer at the top of their heads, as concern grows over workers' lack of engagement with their retirement plans.

Some 26 per cent of Australians cannot name their super fund, with the figure growing to 28 per cent for young people aged 18 to 34, according to a survey from the peak body for super organisations. 

For those who do know, about a third seldom check their super balances or only do so once a year.

Creating a retirement shortfall risk

That leaves people at risk of retiring with less money that they could have, the Super Members Council warns.

"If you're not checking your super regularly or if you're not engaged with it, it may be that you miss out on thousands or even tens of thousands of dollars by retirement," council chief executive Misha Schubert said.

Workers could be losing out on valuable compounding investment returns if they do not check that they have been paid super by employers, an issue affecting 3.3 million people and costing about $6 billion a year.

People who have not consolidated their super accounts could be paying multiple sets of fees. 

Modelling from the council shows paying 0.1 per cent more in fees could make someone $14,000 worse off at retirement, while paying 1 per cent more could make someone miss out on $128,000.

Retirement feels far away

Schubert said complacency might come from the fact that retirement was hard to imagine for those at the start of their working lives.

"For many young people, retirement feels like it's such a long way off, and so it can be easy for them to get busy in their lives and to not think a lot about their super," she said.

Young people are six times more likely to take action to improve their retirement savings when they better understood their super.

"The more engaged you are with your super, the more likely you are to take key decisions at life stages that will help strengthen your financial security in retirement," Schubert said.

Making the most of your super

Workers should make sure they are being paid all their super, consolidate their accounts into one, ensure they are with a top-performing fund and consider making extra contributions.

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