Fund Comparison

Aware Super vs Mine Super — Which Is Better?

A detailed side-by-side comparison for 2026. Fees, returns, insurance, and services.

Quick Verdict Aware Super is cheaper at $50k ($442/yr vs $459/yr). Aware Super leads on 10-year returns (8.10% vs 7.50%).

Fund Overview

Aware Super

TypeIndustry
Established2020
TrusteeAware Super Pty Ltd
HQ StateNSW
Members1.2M
Assets (AUM)$175B

Mine Super

TypeIndustry
Established1992
TrusteeAUSCOAL Superannuation Pty Ltd
HQ StateNSW
Members60K
Assets (AUM)$13B

Fee Comparison

Fee ComponentAware SuperMine Super
Admin Fee (flat)$52$104
Admin Fee (%)0.18%0.15%
Investment Fee0.52%0.50%
Indirect Cost Ratio0.08%0.06%
Buy/Sell Spread0.11%0.10%

Total Annual Fee by Balance

BalanceAware SuperMine Super
$10,000$130$175
$25,000$247$282
$50,000$442$459
$100,000$832$814
$250,000$2,002$1,879
$500,000$3,952$3,654

Performance Comparison

PeriodAware SuperMine Super
1-Year11.50%10.50%
3-Year8.00%7.50%
5-Year8.10%7.80%
7-Year8.20%7.80%
10-Year8.10%7.50%
FY20248.50%8.50%
FY202310.10%9.50%
FY2022-3.20%-2.50%
FY202119.80%18.50%
FY2020-0.30%-0.20%
FY20198.20%7.80%
FY201810.10%9.50%
FY201712.50%11.50%
FY20163.80%3.80%
FY201510.20%9.50%

Insurance Comparison

Aware Super

InsurerAIA Australia
Death CoverYes — unitised, opt-out
TPD CoverYes — unitised, opt-out
IP CoverYes — opt-in

Mine Super

InsurerMetLife Insurance
Death CoverYes — opt-out
TPD CoverYes — opt-out, any/own occupation
IP CoverYes — opt-in

Annual Premium Comparison by Age

AgeAware SuperMine Super
25$130N/A
30$220N/A
35$380N/A
40$580N/A
45$900N/A
50$1,380N/A
55$2,050N/A
60$2,920N/A

APRA Heatmap Ratings

Aware Super

Fee RatingAround median
Return RatingAbove median
SustainabilityPerforming

Mine Super

Fee RatingAbove median
Return RatingAround median
SustainabilityPerforming

Investment Options

Aware Super

Total Options11
Ethical/ESG OptionYes
Indexed OptionNo
Direct InvestingNo

Mine Super

Total Options9
Ethical/ESG OptionNo
Indexed OptionNo
Direct InvestingNo

Member Services

Aware Super

App RatingsiOS 4.6 / Android 4.3
AdviceLimited personal advice included; comprehensive fee-for-service
AFCA Complaints4.3 per 10k members
Call Centre8am-7pm AEST Mon-Fri

Mine Super

App RatingsiOS 4.2 / Android 4.0
AdviceNot specified
AFCA Complaints4.2 per 10k members
Call CentreNot specified

Verdict

On fees, Aware Super is the more affordable option. At a $50,000 balance, Aware Super costs $442 per year compared to $459 for Mine Super — a difference of $17 annually. That gap is small enough that it should not be the deciding factor between these two funds.

Looking at long-term performance, Aware Super holds the edge with a 10-year return of 8.10% versus 7.50% for Mine Super — a gap of 0.60% per annum. While not enormous, that gap adds up over the compounding horizon of a superannuation balance.

On insurance, Aware Super uses AIA Australia while Mine Super is backed by MetLife Insurance. Aware Super charges around $580/year for a 40-year-old's default cover. On member satisfaction, Mine Super has fewer AFCA complaints at 4.2 per 10,000 members compared to 4.3 for the other.

Aware Super is best suited for public sector workers, education sector, while Mine Super targets miners energy workers, fifo workers. One key difference is scale: Aware Super manages $175B in assets and has 1.2M members, dwarfing Mine Super's $13B. Larger funds generally negotiate better fees and access exclusive deal flow, though smaller funds can offer more personalised service.

Read Aware Super Review Read Mine Super Review
Important information The information on SuperFind is general in nature and does not take into account your personal financial situation, needs, or objectives. It is not personal financial advice. Before making any financial decisions about your superannuation, consider whether the information is appropriate for your circumstances and consider seeking advice from a licensed financial adviser. Super fund data including fees and performance returns shown on this site were current as of April 2026 — always verify figures on the fund's website. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. Data sourced from APRA, ATO, and individual fund disclosures. SuperFind is a DecisionLab publication.