πŸ‡¦πŸ‡Ί Sydney Β· AUD salary guide

Is A$10,000 enough in Sydney?

A full breakdown of whether A$10,000/month covers the cost of living in Sydney β€” including take-home pay after tax, monthly costs, your savings rate, and how long until financial independence.

πŸ™‚
Manageable
Comfortable day-to-day but savings are limited at this income level.
A$6,799
Take-home after 32% tax
A$5,100
Average monthly costs
A$1,699
Left over per month
πŸ“Š A 25% savings rate means reaching financial independence in roughly 26 years. To accelerate: increase income, reduce rent (your largest cost at A$3,000/month), or plan to spend retirement in a lower-cost location.

Where your A$10,000 goes in Sydney

🏠 Rent
A$3,000
πŸ›’ Groceries
A$600
πŸš‡ Transport
A$200
🍽 Dining
A$700
πŸ’‘ Utilities
A$200
πŸ“¦ Other
A$400
Total costs A$5,100/month

Key facts about Sydney

High housing costs are the main headwind. Superannuation provides a solid retirement base but is locked until 60. Strong professional salaries.

Tax situation

Income tax up to 45% plus 2% Medicare levy. A A$100,000 salary takes home roughly A$73,000.

Best investment accounts

Superannuation (11% employer contribution on top of salary). Additional ETF investing via CommSec or Pearler.

Your path to financial independence in Sydney

FIRE number for SydneyBased on average costs of A$5100/month, your financial independence number is A$1,530,000 β€” the portfolio that covers your costs indefinitely at a 4% annual withdrawal.

Compare other salary levels in Sydney

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