23/04/2026
“Don’t buy an investment property. It’s greedy. You’re taking homes away from families.”
If you’ve ever told someone you want to build a property portfolio, you’ve probably copped some version of this. It’s a narrative that’s become weirdly loud in Australia. And it’s keeping good people broke.
Here’s the part nobody likes to say out loud.
The current aged pension is about $31,000 a year for a single person. Roughly $600 a week to cover rent, groceries, power, health, and whatever is left of a life. The government is not coming to save you. They will give you the absolute bare minimum, and even that comes with asset tests, income tests, and hoops.
You have two real choices.
Trust a system designed around the lowest common denominator. Or take responsibility, buy assets, and build something that pays you for the rest of your life.
Investing in property isn’t greedy. It’s one of the only ways an everyday Australian on an everyday income can retire with options. It provides housing. It creates tenancy. It compounds over decades. And it fills the gap the pension was never designed to fill.
The principles from Rich Dad Poor Dad aren’t trendy. They aren’t new. Honestly, they aren’t even that complicated. But I genuinely believe they are the foundation of financial literacy for anyone who wants to retire with dignity rather than dependency.
The home you live in takes money out every month. A cash flowing asset puts it back in.
Bad debt funds lifestyle. Good debt funds freedom.
Active income stops the day you stop. Passive income keeps going.
None of that is a hot take. It’s just math most Australians were never taught in school.
If the culture around you tells you investing in property is wrong, ask a simple question. Who actually benefits from you believing that? I’ll save you the suspense. It’s not you.
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