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How the Australian Savings Goal Calculator Works

Calculate the monthly savings needed to reach a financial target in Australia, using current savings rates and A$ examples.

Verified against ASIC MoneySmart - Savings Goals Calculator on 28 Feb 2026 Updated 28 February 2026 4 min read
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Summary

The savings goal calculator determines either how much an Australian needs to save each month to reach a target amount, or how long it will take at a given monthly contribution. It uses the future value of an ordinary annuity formula with monthly compounding, applied at current Australian savings rates of around 4.50%.

How it works

The calculator has two modes:

Mode 1 — Monthly contribution needed: Given a target (e.g., A$209,080 for a 20% deposit on the median A$1,045,400 home), current savings, time horizon, and interest rate, it solves for the required monthly payment.

Mode 2 — Time to reach goal: Given a target, current savings, fixed monthly contribution, and interest rate, it simulates month-by-month growth until the balance reaches the target.

The formula for the required monthly payment is:

PMT = (Target - PV x (1 + r)^n) x r / ((1 + r)^n - 1)

Where PV is current savings, r is the monthly rate (annual rate / 12), and n is the total number of months.

Australian considerations

  • Conditional savings rates. Many Australian high-interest savings accounts (offering 4.50%+) require meeting monthly conditions — typically depositing A$1,000+ and making no withdrawals. Failing conditions can drop the rate to as low as 0.10%.
  • First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSSS). Eligible first home buyers can make voluntary super contributions (up to A$15,000/year, A$50,000 total) and later withdraw them, plus deemed earnings, for a home deposit. The concessional tax treatment (15% vs marginal rate) can accelerate savings.
  • First Home Owner Grant (FHOG). State grants of A$10,000-A$30,000 for new homes can reduce the savings target.
  • Inflation at 3.8% means a 4.50% nominal savings rate delivers only ~0.7% real growth. For long-term goals (5+ years), investing in equities or a diversified fund may better outpace inflation.

Worked example

Target: A$209,080 (20% deposit on A$1,045,400 median home). Current savings: A$40,000. Time horizon: 5 years. Savings rate: 4.50%.

  1. Monthly rate: 4.50% / 12 = 0.375%
  2. Total months: 5 x 12 = 60
  3. Future value of A$40,000: A$40,000 x (1.00375)^60 = A$40,000 x 1.2523 = A$50,091
  4. Amount needed from contributions: A$209,080 - A$50,091 = A$158,989
  5. Annuity factor: ((1.00375)^60 - 1) / 0.00375 = 67.28
  6. Monthly contribution: A$158,989 / 67.28 = A$2,363/month
  7. Total contributions: A$40,000 + (A$2,363 x 60) = A$181,780
  8. Interest earned: A$209,080 - A$181,780 = A$27,300

At 0% interest (cash under the mattress), the required monthly contribution would be A$2,818 — compound interest saves A$455/month.

Key differences from other markets

  • The First Home Super Saver Scheme lets Australians use the concessionally taxed super system to accelerate deposit savings — no equivalent exists in the UK (the Lifetime ISA bonus is conceptually similar but structurally different) or the US.
  • Conditional savings rates in Australia mean the advertised 4.50%+ is not guaranteed month to month, unlike fixed-term deposits common in the UK and US.

出典

Gov
RBA - Interest Rate Statisticsaccessed 28 Feb 2026
Gov
ABS - Consumer Price Indexaccessed 28 Feb 2026
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