Age Pension assets test calculator

Age Pension assets test calculator guide for Australians.

Use this guide to understand what an assets test calculator is really doing: checking homeowner status, couple status, assessable assets, the current threshold, the taper rate, and whether the income test may still produce the lower Age Pension estimate.

Official rules checked 14 June 2026

The figures an assets test calculator needs.

For educational modelling, Pension Pilot checks the relevant homeowner or non-homeowner threshold, then reduces the maximum Age Pension by the assets-test taper where assessable assets sit above that threshold. Services Australia remains the official source for claims, evidence and final decisions.

HouseholdFull-pension assets thresholdApproximate cut-off
Single homeowner$321,500About $722,000
Single non-homeowner$579,500About $980,000
Couple homeowner$481,500 combinedAbout $1,085,000 combined
Couple non-homeowner$739,500 combinedAbout $1,343,000 combined
The assets-test taper used here is $3 per fortnight for every $1,000 of assessable assets above the relevant threshold. These figures are source-dated and should be rechecked when rates and thresholds change.

What counts before you use a pension assets test calculator.

Financial assets

Bank accounts, term deposits, shares, managed funds and super that is assessable can count under the assets test and also create deemed income under the income test.

Non-financial assets

Cars, caravans, boats, contents, personal assets and investment property can count under the assets test even though they are not normally deemed like financial assets.

Your home

The principal home is treated differently from other assets, but being a homeowner changes which threshold applies. That is why home status must be entered correctly.

Worked example

Why the same assets can produce different Age Pension estimates.

A single homeowner and a single non-homeowner can enter the same assessable assets and get different results because the non-homeowner threshold is higher. A couple can also get a different result because the calculation is usually based on the combined household position.

  • A single homeowner with $500,000 of assessable assets is above the full-pension threshold, so the assets-test taper reduces the estimate.
  • A single non-homeowner with $500,000 of assessable assets is below the full-pension assets threshold, so the income test may be the tighter test instead.
  • A couple homeowner with $650,000 combined assessable assets is above the couple homeowner threshold, so the combined pension estimate is reduced by the taper.
This is why a good calculator should show the household type, threshold, taper and binding test instead of only showing one final payment number.

Why Age Pension calculator results differ.

Wrong source date

Rates and thresholds change. An old calculator can look precise while using stale numbers.

Home status error

Homeowner and non-homeowner thresholds are materially different, so this input can shift the result.

Income test still applies

Financial assets can create deemed income, and employment or passive income can reduce the pension even when the assets test looks acceptable.

Couple edge cases

Mixed-age couples, younger partner super, illness-separated status and foreign pension income can need a closer official check.

Before using a calculator

  • Confirm whether the household is single or couple.
  • Confirm homeowner or non-homeowner status.
  • Separate financial assets from other assessable assets.
  • Record super balances and whether each person has reached Age Pension age.
  • Record work income, passive income, foreign pension income and defined-benefit income.

How Pension Pilot uses this

Pension Pilot places the assets-test estimate inside the wider retirement picture: spending, super drawdowns, bridge years, income targets, deeming and adviser-prep questions. The aim is to explain the pressure points, not pretend an estimate is an official entitlement decision.

Common questions about pension assets test calculators.

Does my home count?

The principal home is generally treated differently from other assessable assets, but homeowner status changes the threshold used in the assets test.

What if I have money in super?

Super can be assessable once the relevant person reaches Age Pension age. Mixed-age couples need careful handling because one partner may be treated differently.

Can the income test beat the assets test?

Yes. The assets test and income test are both checked, and the lower result after the relevant reductions usually matters.

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