Q I am now a permanent resident so I can join KiwiSaver — but is it worth me joining? I am self-employed and will be 58 in December. How long do you have to save for and would I get any worthwhile return?
A Well done on noting the fact that your residence status allows you to join KiwiSaver. The exact wording is "entitled to live in New Zealand indefinitely". This has the side-effect of entitling any Australian citizen who comes to New Zealand to work to join up straight away. Most foreigners need to apply for and be granted permanent residence before they can join KiwiSaver.
The main financial advantage of joining KiwiSaver for the self-employed lies with the government top ups. As you are nearly 58 you will be able to save into KiwiSaver for the next seven years, to age 65, before your entitlement to the annual government contribution finishes (and your savings are unlocked). If you save $7300 over the next seven years ($1042.86 per year or $87 per month) you will receive $3650 from the Government. This assumes that the current annual rate of $521.43 in government contributions continues for the next seven years.
Putting away $7300 over seven years and getting back $10,950 (plus any investment returns) looks like a pretty good investment. If you add a modest annual net return of 3 per cent you will have around $11,990 after seven years. Doubling your net return to 6 per cent per annum will give you $13,130 after seven years. In the early days returns don't make a huge difference — the most important thing is to get started.
Is there an alternative to KiwiSaver? If you saved $1042.86 per year into a bank account earning 1 per cent after tax you would have just $7522 after seven years.