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How Investment Fees Erode Returns in Australia

How ongoing fund fees compound over time in Australia, comparing industry super funds, retail funds, and low-cost ETFs.

Verified against APRA - Superannuation Statistics on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 3 min read
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Summary

Investment fees — expressed as the Management Expense Ratio (MER) or Indirect Cost Ratio (ICR) in Australia — are deducted annually from your portfolio value. Even small fee differences compound dramatically over decades. The Productivity Commission’s 2018 inquiry found that a 0.5% fee difference could cost the average Australian worker A$100,000+ over their lifetime through super alone.

How it works

Australian investment fees are applied as a percentage of the portfolio value, deducted continuously from the fund’s unit price. You never see a line-item charge; the fund simply grows slightly less than the underlying assets.

Typical Australian fee structures

Fund typeTypical annual feeExamples
Low-cost ETF0.03% - 0.20%Vanguard Australian Shares ETF (0.07%), BetaShares A200 (0.04%)
Industry super fund0.50% - 0.90%AustralianSuper (0.57%), HESTA (0.66%)
Retail super fund0.80% - 1.50%AMP, MLC, Colonial First State
Active managed fund0.80% - 1.80%Magellan, Platinum Asset Management
Financial advisor wrap1.50% - 2.50%Includes advisor fees, platform fees, and fund fees

Fee types in super

Australian super funds often have multiple fee layers:

  • Administration fee: Fixed dollar amount (A$50-A$200/year) or percentage-based
  • Investment fee: The MER of the underlying investment option
  • Insurance premiums: Death and disability cover (deducted from your balance, not technically an investment fee but reduces growth)
  • Performance fees: Some funds charge 10-20% of returns above a benchmark

APRA heatmap

Since 2019, APRA publishes a “heatmap” ranking super funds by investment performance, fees, and sustainability. Funds that consistently underperform may be prevented from accepting new members — a regulatory mechanism unique to Australia.

The compounding formula for fee-adjusted returns is:

Net monthly return = (1 + R - F)^(1/12) - 1

Where R is the annual gross return and F is the annual fee.

Worked example

A$50,000 super balance + A$10,000/year employer contributions at 8% gross return over 30 years:

  1. Total contributions: A$50,000 + (A$10,000 x 30) = A$350,000
  2. With 0.10% fee (low-cost ETF in SMSF): Net return 7.90%. Final balance: A$1,284,600
  3. With 0.57% fee (top industry fund): Net return 7.43%. Final balance: A$1,163,200
  4. With 1.50% fee (retail fund): Net return 6.50%. Final balance: A$976,400
  5. Cost of retail vs low-cost: A$1,284,600 - A$976,400 = A$308,200 lost to fees
  6. Cost of retail vs industry: A$1,163,200 - A$976,400 = A$186,800 lost to fees

The 1.40% fee difference between the low-cost and retail options costs nearly as much as the total A$350,000 in contributions.

Key differences from other markets

  • Compulsory superannuation (12%) means investment fees affect every working Australian, not just those who choose to invest — making fee awareness a universal concern rather than one limited to active investors as in the UK or US.
  • APRA’s regulatory heatmap and performance testing actively names and penalises underperforming super funds, a level of government intervention in fund management not seen in the UK (FCA) or US (SEC) markets.

स्रोत

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