Financial Foundations

Cash Flow in Australia: Managing What Comes In and Goes Out

Cash flow is the net movement of money into and out of your financial life — what comes in (salary, dividends, rental income) minus what goes out (rent, mortgage, bills, lifestyle spending). Positive cash flow means you are building wealth.

Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
By Lily, Richify's Financial Teacher
2 min read · Updated June 2026

Unlike net worth, which measures accumulated wealth, cash flow measures the rate at which you are building or depleting it. You can have high net worth and poor cash flow (a homeowner with $800,000 equity but minimal savings). You can have low net worth but strong cash flow (a young professional investing $1,500 per month). Both numbers matter.

For Australians, cash flow has some unique dimensions. Super contributions (SG) come off the top before you see your pay — effectively a forced 11.5% savings rate. HECS-HELP repayments are deducted automatically once your income exceeds the threshold. The Medicare levy takes another 2%. Understanding your true take-home pay after these deductions is essential.

Cash flow from investments — ETF distributions, franked dividends, rental income after expenses — is the ultimate goal. Once your investment cash flow equals or exceeds your living expenses, you have achieved financial independence.

Map your cash flow in three categories: essential expenses (rent or mortgage, groceries, utilities, transport, insurance), lifestyle expenses (dining out, entertainment, subscriptions, travel), and wealth-building commitments (extra super contributions, ETF investments, debt repayments above minimums). Most Australians are surprised to find how much their lifestyle spending reduces what is available to invest.

Even modest improvements matter enormously. Redirecting $300 per month from discretionary spending into a diversified ETF like VDHG, growing at 7% annually, produces roughly $365,000 over 30 years. Small cash flow improvements compound into life-changing sums.

Richify Tip

Richify helps you understand your real cash flow picture after super, HECS, and Medicare — then identifies specific opportunities to redirect money toward wealth-building goals.

Related terms

Net WorthPassive Income50/30/20 Budget RuleEmergency FundFinancial Independence
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