I have three children and been at home looking after them for the past six years. I've been offered a part-time job that pays the minimum wage, so not big money, but it will work really well around their school and day-care hours. I have never been in KiwiSaver but I will get signed up through this new job. Can I opt out? I don't want my money taken off me and put in an account where I can't spend it until I'm 65. I can probably save just as much into a bank account. Are there any good reasons why I shouldn't opt out?
Congratulations on finding part-time work to fit in with caring for your children. All eligible new employees are signed up to KiwiSaver when they start work.
If you want to opt out, you can do so after you have been in the job for at least two weeks, and you have until week eight to do so. This is to give you some time to see what impact it has on your budget, and is also designed to encourage participation by inertia - people prefer the "do nothing" option so many workers have found themselves contributing to KiwiSaver because they never got round to filling in the opt-out form.
Have you worked out just how much of your pay will be deducted for KiwiSaver? If you earn $300 gross a week, at 3per cent your KiwiSaver deductions will amount to $9 a week. Can you afford this? If you decide you can, then you will also get contributions from your employer - and here's where it starts getting so much better than saving into a bank account.
Your employer has to add their 3per cent (after tax) to your contribution, so straight away you are getting a very generous return on your $9 investment.