AustralianSuper vs REST
Side-by-side comparison of the two funds on the numbers that actually matter: long-term net return, fees at your balance, asset mix, and insurance defaults.
| Metric | AustralianSuper | REST | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 10-year net return (MySuper) | 7.90% | 7.40% | AustralianSuper |
| Annual fee at $50,000 | $337 | $398 | AustralianSuper |
| Annual fee at $250,000 | $1,477 | $1,678 | AustralianSuper |
| MySuper product | Balanced | Core Strategy | |
| Asset mix (MySuper) | Growth 70 / Defensive 30 | Growth 75 / Defensive 25 | |
| Assets under management | $365B+ | $90B+ | |
| Members | 3.4M+ | 1.9M+ | |
| APRA assessment | Performing | Performing | |
| Choice options | 11 | 9 |
Which is better for you?
Over 10 years, AustralianSuper has outperformed by roughly 0.50 percentage points per year. On a $250,000 balance held for 20 years at the average return, a 1 p.p. return gap compounds to roughly $90,000 — so even small return differences add up.
On fees, at a $50,000 balance AustralianSuper is cheaper ($61 difference per year). At a $250,000 balance the fee winner is AustralianSuper. The percentage component of fees matters more as balance grows.
AustralianSuper is better if
- Very large scale → competitive fees at mid/high balances
- Consistent top-quartile 10-year performance
- Direct Investment option gives control over ASX300 shares, ETFs and term deposits
REST is better if
- Huge member base, much of it young — strong fit for first-job workers
- Reasonable fees for a mid-sized fund
- Rest Super App is well-regarded for low-friction engagement
Things neither fund fixes
- Performance test results change yearly — check the APRA heatmap before you decide
- Default insurance may not match your actual cover needs
- Switching funds cancels your existing insurance — check health status first
Full fund reviews
Read the complete reviews: AustralianSuper · REST. Or use the compare-funds tool to add any pair and your own balance.
General information only — not financial advice. Super decisions are long-term; verify with a licensed adviser.