Sorting out the finances for Australia

We’ve been investigating how our banking, investments, savings, pension, and mortgage will work when we move to Australia as we can explore that now rather than wait until everything is happening at once.

Banking turns out to be relatively simple. Many people will use Wise initially which, although not an actual bank, will give you local account numbers in both the UK and Australia. Although both will work for the usual direct debits, payments, and debit card transactions, the Australian one has some limitations, specifically it can’t be used to receive social security payments. However, much better is the HSBC Australia Everyday Global account which is a proper Australian bank account and is the only Australian bank that let’s you fully open an account from abroad (tell them that you’re using it for saving, NOT that you’re going to be moving there); the debit card arrives in a couple of weeks. Although you don’t have to have an HSBC UK Advance account, if you do, you can do instant transfers from it to your HSBC Australia account. The other plus point of this is that HSBC UK will let you keep that account when you’re living in Australia. Transfers in the reverse direction take a day or two unless you have HSBC Premier. You need to use the HSBC Australia account every month or two so that it doesn’t go dormant.

Savings are more tricky as many banks and building societies will require you to close your accounts when you move abroad. Notable exceptions to this are the Nationwide, HSBC, Lloyds, and RBS/NatWest. If your cash ISA is with one of these, you could keep it but a) can’t add more to it and b) the interest will be taxable in Australia as they don’t recognise ISAs. The same mostly applies to investment ISAs and investments generally.

Banking in Australia is a bit different. When you move, you’ll find that many of the UK banks and building societies will close your account so you want to have one or more of the above opened before you move, as you’ll not be able to open them afterwards. As you’ll notice, those I’ve mentioned above are legacy banks and in practice most (all?) of the fintech banks (Kroo, Monzo, Starling) will close your account. If you fancy a fintech in Australia, there’s UBank and Up, but you can’t open those until you are an Australian resident.

Pensions are rather more complex. Due to HMRC requirements, if you are going to transfer your pension then it can only be to an Australian SMSF which is QROPS compliant which in turn means that you’re looking at setup fees of around £2000 and similar annual fees after that. The maximum that you can transfer in this way is A$120000 (£60000) per year (potentially triple that in your first year). Alternatively you could just access your UK pension from Australia and simply declare the withdrawals in Australia (they’ll generally be subject to Australian income tax as if you tell HMRC that you’ve left, they won’t apply UK tax). Given that my UK SIPP costs all of £120/year, my current thinking is that I will just leave it in the UK and make withdrawals as I’d have done if I’d still been in the UK. One thing to note is that you don’t need an international pension and any place that seems to offer one is likely a scam. That said, some normal SIPPs come in a rebadged international version so, my one with AJ Bell does, but it’s just the same with a different name on the tin. You can only transfer defined contribution schemes, not final salary ones nor your UK state pension. If you tell the state pension people, they can pay your pension to an Australian bank account in Australian dollars, or you can get it paid into a UK bank account. As I say, this is a complex area and you’re going to need advice on this.

Credit cards are something that you may want in Australia, however you won’t have a credit history when you turn up obviously and therefore will likely get rejected when applying. Two ways around this are to open an American Express card in the UK before you leave and use their Global Transfer service (basically you apply for a card in Australia and in the application check the box that says existing customer and you should be in business. Their Australian cards mainly come with a fee and to my mind, the best currently is The American Express® Platinum Edge Credit Card which is A$195/year after the first year but comes with enough supermarket discounts to, for me, cover the cost. If you don’t want a fee, there’s The Qantas American Express Discovery Card and The Low Rate Credit Card. Worth noting is that Amex acceptance seems much lower in Australia than it is in the UK. The other way around no credit history is to apply for an HSBC Australia credit card as they will check your UK credit history; their Premier card is free and their low rate card is A$99/year.

So what about a mortgage? If you’ve a mortgage on your UK home, you’ll likely have to pay that off before you go, or essentially change it into a buy to let mortgage (the interest rate will usually be about 1% higher). You seem to be able to keep a buy to let mortgage going although it’ll be a bit more complicated when you come to renewing any fixed offer that you may have and your choice of banks offering it will likely be more restricted. What about an Australia mortgage? Still to be researched more fully, but they look much the same as UK mortgages, albeit with fewer options and, of course, there’s the business of proving your income in Australia.

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