Cutcher | Insights and News

“If I knew then…” Regret-proofing your first years as a doctor.

Written by Jodie Walshe, Partner, Accounting & Taxation Services | 22 January 2026 4:52:49 AM

Your first years as a Doctor in Training move fast. Long hours, constant rotations, exams, relocations and a steep learning curve mean financial decisions often happen on autopilot, or sometimes not at all. This is the time where mistakes are made. Not because you did anything wrong, but because no one ever showed you what right looked like. 

Most doctors can look back on their early years and pinpoint the moments that trigger the same thought: “If only I’d known then what I know now.” 

The good news? A few smart foundations now can save you years of playing catch-up later, and set you on a path to financial success. 

Common mistakes young doctors make. 

  1. Waiting too long to get advice

One of the most common regrets we hear is “I thought I didn’t earn enough to need advice yet.” 

Acting early makes the biggest difference to future outcomes, but only if you’re structured properly and well informed from the start. Things like tax planning, salary packaging, superannuation strategy and debt structuring are far easier (and cheaper) to get right early than to unwind later. 

Think of advice less as something you need once you’re successful, and more as a tool to help you get there faster. 

  1. Not understanding your payslip (or tax bill)

Hospital pays, overtime, penalties, allowances, locum work. It all adds up quickly and often inconsistently. Many early-career doctors don’t realise how easily small oversights can turn into nasty tax surprises. 

Understanding how your income is taxed, what you can claim, and how different work arrangements interact can make a meaningful difference to your cash flow. 

  1. Putting superannuation in the ‘later’ basket

Super can feel irrelevant when retirement is decades away. But doctors who delay engaging with super often regret missing out on: 

  • compounding growth in high-income years
    • contribution opportunities once income rises
    • risk protection benefits built into the right super structure 

Small, consistent decisions early can quietly build significant long-term wealth, without adding pressure to your day-to-day budget. 

  1. Not protecting your most valuable asset– you 

Your ability to earn an income is your greatest financial asset, especially early in your career. Yet many doctors delay personal insurance because it feels uncomfortable, expensive, or unnecessary. 

The regret usually comes later when health issues arise, underwriting becomes more difficult, or cover is no longer affordable on the same terms. Getting the right protection in place early is about preserving choice, not predicting the worst. 

  1. Not preparing early for the property ladder 

Your early years are the ideal time to quietly improve your borrowing power. How you save, structure debt, manage HECS and set up your accounts now can make a big difference when you’re ready to buy 

The regret we hear most? “I didn’t realise I could have done all this sooner.” Laying the groundwork early keeps your future home goals within reach. 

Regret-proofing starts with a conversation 

Your first years don’t have to be perfect, they just need to be intentional. 

At Cutcher & Neale, we’ve spent decades working alongside doctors at every stage of their careers. We understand the pressures, the pathways, and the unique opportunities your profession creates. Our role is to help you make informed decisions early, so future you isn’t left thinking “if only…”. 

If you’d like clarity around where you’re heading, and how to structure things properly from the start, a complimentary consultation is often the simplest place to begin. 

Contact us today on 1800 988 522 or visit www.cutcher.com.au/contact