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Why Apprentices Shouldn’t Wait: Protect Your Income, Build Wealth & Think Long-Term

  • Banana's Support
  • Mar 4
  • 3 min read

Updated: 6 days ago


If you’re an electrical apprentice, you’re not just learning a trade.


You’re building a career that can earn you $150,000 to $200,000 per year once fully qualified — especially in sectors like mining, construction, tunnelling and major infrastructure projects.


That income potential is powerful.


But here’s the hard truth:


If your body earns that income… what protects it?


Locking in $3 Million TPD Cover Early


Total & Permanent Disability (TPD) insurance pays a lump sum if you become permanently unable to work due to injury or illness.


For electricians in physically demanding, blue-collar roles, this isn’t optional protection — it’s risk management.


Here’s what age does to premiums:


  • Age 22 – Approx. $29.40 per week for $3 million in cover

  • Age 42 – Approx. $116.70 per week for the same cover



That’s nearly four times more expensive just by waiting.


Premiums increase because risk increases. The younger and healthier you are when you secure cover, the more affordable it remains long-term.


Starting early can save tens of thousands in premiums alone.


But the bigger issue isn’t the premium.


It’s the income you’re protecting.




What’s Actually at Risk?



Let’s say you qualify at 22 and build into a role earning $175,000 per year (midpoint of $150k–$200k).


Now compare two scenarios:



Scenario 1: Injured at 22



Unable to ever return to work.

Working life lost: 43 years (22 to 65).


$175,000 × 43 years = $7.5 million in lost earnings




Scenario 2: Injured at 42



Unable to ever return to work.

Working life lost: 23 years (42 to 65).


$175,000 × 23 years = $4 million in lost earnings



Without insurance, that earning capacity disappears overnight.


A $3 million TPD payout doesn’t replace every dollar — but it:


  • Pays off a mortgage

  • Secures housing

  • Reduces financial pressure

  • Buys time and dignity

  • Protects your family



Without it, you’re relying on government support and whatever super balance you’ve built.


That’s a massive financial gap.




Building Wealth at the Same Time



Protection is step one.


Wealth building is step two.


Through the First Home Super Saver Scheme (FHSS), apprentices can use superannuation strategically to build a home deposit.


Here’s how:


  • Salary sacrifice $100 per week into super

  • Contributions taxed at 15% (often lower than your marginal rate)

  • Money grows in a tax-effective environment

  • Withdraw eligible contributions plus earnings later for a home deposit



This allows you to:


Reduce tax

Build a deposit faster

Keep long-term super growing

Maintain insurance protection inside super


It’s not protection or wealth.


It’s both — structured properly.




Why Starting at 22 Is So Powerful



At 22:


  • Premiums are lower

  • Health is typically stronger

  • Compounding has decades to work

  • Career earnings are ahead of you



At 42:


  • Premiums are significantly higher

  • Medical exclusions are more likely

  • 20 years of compounding is already lost

  • Retirement is much closer



Time is the biggest financial multiplier you have.


And apprentices have the most of it.



Electricians work in:


  • Mining

  • Construction

  • Tunnelling

  • Solar farms

  • Processing plants

  • Hospitals



These are high-skill, high-income — but physically demanding — environments.


Your qualification may take four years.


Your body carries you for 40+.


Protecting it financially is just smart planning.




The Real Difference Between 22 and 42



If you wait:


  • Insurance costs more

  • You risk medical exclusions

  • You lose compounding growth

  • You shorten your protection window



If you start early:


  • You lock in affordability

  • You protect $4–7+ million in future earning capacity

  • You build a deposit tax-effectively

  • You create long-term financial structure





Let’s Empower the Next Generation



This isn’t about selling fear.


It’s about understanding numbers.


When apprentices realise they could earn $150k–$200k per year… and potentially lose $4–7 million in lifetime income if something goes wrong… the conversation changes.


Planning ahead at 22 is strategic.


Trying to fix it at 42 is reactive.


The earlier you understand how superannuation, insurance and tax strategies work together, the stronger your position becomes.


Because once you’re qualified, your income can be powerful.

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