Apologies for dragging up an old thread but have found it interesting to read as I am currently at a cross roads on which way to go.
I have the option to keep working for average income or stop work and receive a pension that is not means tested but limited to what can be done to earn extra income if I take it.
Problem is at 53 I like to keep busy so may find it hard letting go although I did leave fulltime employment working for someone else 10 years ago so am used to being self motivated.
For those that retired early how did you find it and has anyone gone back to work after a few years even if part time.
From a financial point I am lucky I never invested much into super so I can access what I have today its just working out how much you will need each year. I have used chatgpt to work out what income would be possible while still allowing the assets to increase in value and as I am only 53 I will still being paying tax. They say a comfortable retirement can be had on 80k a year but my concern is when your not working theres more time to spend money.
I'm in my mid 60s and moving to retirement now, and went through the same types of questions etc 10 years ago. And the usual disclaimer, I'm not in the financial game, get your own advice etc.
The best advice I can give though, is find a good financial advisor who understands all of the rules around income and capital gains tax, accessing super for retirement etc, and how much a year you need - do you know now how much you're spending now, broken into the different categories? For example, as you get older, medcial bills can be bigger.
It sounds like you might have a government type scheme behind you and there are a lot of rules, obvious and hidden, around them. Ask around for recommendations for an advisor, meet them and check them out to see how knowledgeable they are around the rules of your particular scheme, what options they can provide, preferably not locked to a single product or brand. If you decide to proceed with them and get the full advice, it will probably cost you $5,000-10,000, but it's worth it.