Conditions of Release Explained | When Can You Access Your Super | Retirement Calculators

Conditions of Release Explained

The legal gateways that allow you to access your superannuation.

Your super fund cannot pay you your benefits just because you ask nicely. They're legally required to confirm you've met a condition of release before any money can flow to you.

These conditions are set out in Schedule 1 of the Superannuation Industry (Supervision) Regulations 1994 β€” they're not arbitrary rules your fund made up. Understanding which conditions apply to you is the first step in accessing your retirement savings.

πŸ”‘ Three Types of Benefit Status

Every dollar in your super has a legal "status" that determines whether it can be paid out:

  • Preserved benefits β€” Cannot be accessed until a condition of release is met (this is most super)
  • Restricted non-preserved β€” Can only be accessed under specific conditions
  • Unrestricted non-preserved β€” Can be accessed at any time

Age-Based Conditions of Release

The most common way Australians access their super is through age-based conditions. As you get older, the restrictions progressively ease.

Full Access β€” No Restrictions

Turning 65

Once you reach age 65, you can access your super regardless of whether you're still working. This is the simplest condition β€” no retirement declaration, no employment cessation, just reach the age.

Your benefit status permanently becomes "unrestricted non-preserved" and you can take lump sums, start pensions, or leave it invested β€” completely your choice.

Full Access β€” No Restrictions

Ceasing Employment After Age 60

If you're 60 or older and you cease an employment arrangement, all your super becomes fully accessible. The key word is "an" β€” you only need to leave one job.

Important: You don't have to stop working entirely. You can resign from Job A on Friday and start Job B on Monday β€” you've still satisfied this condition. Once triggered, it's permanent.

Example: Sarah, Age 61

Sarah works part-time at two jobs. She resigns from one job but keeps the other. She has now satisfied the "cease employment after 60" condition. All her super is now unrestricted β€” permanently β€” even though she's still working at her other job.

Full Access β€” Intention-Based

Reaching Preservation Age and Retiring

If you've reached preservation age (between 55 and 60 depending on your birth year β€” see table below) and you've retired, you can access your super.

But "retired" has a specific legal meaning: you must have ceased gainful employment and have a genuine intention to never again work more than 10 hours per week.

⚠️ Retirement is Intention-Based

Because this condition relies on your intention, it can be reversed. If you access super based on retirement, then later return to work more than 10 hours per week, your remaining super may revert to preserved status. The money you've already withdrawn is fine β€” but further access may be blocked until another condition is met.

What's My Preservation Age?

Date of BirthPreservation Age
Before 1 July 196055
1 July 1960 – 30 June 196156
1 July 1961 – 30 June 196257
1 July 1962 – 30 June 196358
1 July 1963 – 30 June 196459
From 1 July 196460

Transition to Retirement (Partial Access)

Partial Access β€” Capped at 10%/year

Reaching Preservation Age (Still Working)

If you've reached preservation age but haven't retired, you can access super through a Transition to Retirement Income Stream (TRIS). This lets you draw a pension while still working.

However, TRIS has restrictions: you can only withdraw between 4% and 10% maximum of your account balance per year. You cannot take lump sums.

Learn more about Transition to Retirement β†’

Special Conditions of Release

Beyond age-based conditions, there are several special circumstances that allow super access:

Full Access β€” Tax-Free

Terminal Medical Condition

If two registered medical practitioners certify that you have a terminal illness (life expectancy of less than 24 months), you can access your entire super balance.

Benefits paid under this condition are completely tax-free regardless of your age or the components of your super.

Full Access β€” Possible Tax Concessions

Permanent Incapacity

If you're permanently incapacitated (two medical practitioners certify you're unlikely to ever work in your previous occupation or a role you're qualified for), you can access your super.

Special tax rules can increase your tax-free component, potentially reducing tax on the withdrawal significantly.

Restricted Access β€” Capped Amounts

Severe Financial Hardship

If you've been receiving government income support for 26 weeks and cannot meet immediate family living expenses, you may be able to withdraw a limited amount.

Limits apply: Generally between $1,000 and $10,000. This is not a way to access your full balance early.

Restricted Access β€” ATO Approval Required

Compassionate Grounds

The ATO can approve early release for specific compassionate reasons including:

  • Medical treatment or transport for you or a dependant
  • Modifications to your home or vehicle for severe disability
  • Palliative care for a terminal illness
  • Expenses to prevent foreclosure on your home
  • Funeral or burial expenses for a dependant

You must apply to the ATO (not your super fund) and provide supporting documentation. Only the amount needed for the specific purpose can be released.

Employment Structure Matters

The way you earn income affects how "ceasing employment" is assessed:

If You're...How "Cessation" Works
An employeeClear-cut: your employment contract ends (resignation, termination, redundancy). Evidence: termination letter, final payslip.
A sole traderMore complex: you must genuinely cease carrying on business. Reducing hours or "semi-retiring" may not be enough. Evidence: ABN cancellation, business closure documents.
A partner in a partnershipCessation occurs when you cease being a partner or cease active participation. Continuing to share profits while delegating tasks may not satisfy the condition.
A company director/controllerYou may hold multiple roles (employee, director, shareholder). Ceasing employment may be valid while control continues β€” but for retirement condition, ongoing control can undermine the intention test.

Example: John, Age 62, Company Director

John is 62 and works as an employee of his own company. He also holds shares and is a director. He resigns as an employee but remains a director/shareholder.

Result: He has satisfied the "cease employment after 60" condition (he ended his employment arrangement). His ongoing director role doesn't undo this. All his super is now unrestricted.

🚫 Warning: Illegal Early Access Schemes

There are scams that promise to help you access super early, often for a fee. These are illegal. If you withdraw super without meeting a genuine condition of release, you may face:

  • The amount treated as assessable income (taxed at your marginal rate)
  • Additional penalties and interest
  • The promoter of the scheme may face criminal charges

If you're struggling financially, speak to your super fund about legitimate hardship provisions first.

Summary: Which Condition Applies to You?

Your SituationLikely ConditionAccess Type
Age 65+Attaining age 65Full β€” unrestricted
Age 60-64, left a jobCease employment after 60Full β€” unrestricted
Preservation age, stopped working, won't returnRetirementFull β€” but intention-based
Preservation age, still workingTRISPartial β€” max 10%/year
Terminally illTerminal medical conditionFull β€” tax-free
Permanently incapacitatedPermanent incapacityFull β€” tax concessions available
Financial hardship (on benefits 26+ weeks)Severe financial hardshipLimited β€” $1,000-$10,000

Not Sure Which Condition Applies to You?

Your situation may involve multiple factors β€” employment structure, age, intentions. Get clarity with expert guidance.

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Last updated: January 2026

Disclaimer

NOT PERSONAL ADVICE β€” these guides are designed to educate and provide general direction. Always confirm your eligibility with your super fund or a licensed adviser.Contact Us

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