How to Set up a Self Managed Super Fund
A self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) can be a useful vehicle to invest in property and other assets to build wealth for your retirement. Despite typically higher borrowing costs within a SMSF, they are known to provide investors (the trustee) with greater control and purchasing power when it...

iBuildNew Editorial TeamMarch 5, 20194 min read
A self-managed superannuation fund (SMSF) can be a useful vehicle to invest in property and other assets to build wealth for your retirement. Despite typically higher borrowing costs within a SMSF, they are known to provide investors (the trustee) with greater control and purchasing power when it comes to real estate, and can produce considerable tax, business and liquidity benefits at retirement. Most importantly, a SMSF can allow you to access your super for the purposes of investing in high growth investments such as property, that you would ordinarily not be able to within a retail or industry super fund. See our article How to Invest in Property using the SMSF for more information on that topic.Before setting it up…keep in mind
One of the first ports of call is accumulating a large enough super balance to justify the setup and annual administrative costs associated with a SMSF. The required super balance to justify a SMSF is a hot topic, with many suggesting anywhere from as little as $100,000 up to $500,000. Given it will normally cost $1-2k to establish the SMSF, and then $1-2k pa to cover the compliance costs, we would normally suggest you require at least $200,000 in super to support the upfront and ongoing costs. It’s also important recognised that an SMSF is “self-managed”, so by definition you need to spend some time on this, and ideally have some knowledge of investment strategies, funds management, trustee responsibilities, compliance requirements, etc, or at least have a good advisor to cover these things.


iBuildNew Editorial Team
As the specialist voice of Australia’s largest new home building resource, the iBuildNew Editorial Team delivers deep-dive coverage into the house and land sector. From analysing new estate launches to highlighting the country’s leading home designs, we track the building journey to provide clarity for every buyer.




