Switching jobs? There's more to do with your 401(k) than just rolling it
over
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[October 24, 2024] By
STAN CHOE
Job hopping is one of the best ways workers have to increase their pay,
and a surprisingly solid job market means they still have opportunities.
That’s great news for workers, but remember: Make sure you’re setting
aside as much into your new 401(k) plan as your old one.
When a worker moves to a new job, they have to take the extra step of
signing up for their new employer’s 401(k) plan and deciding how much of
their paycheck to contribute. Otherwise, if they’re lucky, they’ll end
up getting automatically enrolled into the plan and contributing
whatever the employer decided as the default percentage of pay.
At nearly half of the 401(k) plans with automatic enrollment that
Vanguard keeps records for, that default is 3% or 4%.
For first-time workers just starting their careers, that kind of
contribution might make some sense, even if the rule of thumb is to save
10% to 15% of your pay. Many 401(k) plans will also automatically
increase that savings percentage by 1 percentage point per year.
But for a worker in the 10th or 20th year of their career, that could
mean they're suddenly contributing just 3% or 4% of their pay instead of
the 15% they had been in their prior job. Even worse, for workers whose
new jobs don't automatically enroll them in the retirement savings plan,
they could see their contributions drop all the way to zero unless they
sign up.
The total hit to a worker's nest egg could amount to $300,000. That's
according to a recent study by Vanguard, which estimated what a
retirement savings slowdown could mean for a worker earning $60,000 at
the start of their career who switched jobs eight times across
employers. That's enough to fund an estimated six additional years of
spending in retirement.
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Pedestrians walk past 666 Fifth Avenue, June 20, 2018, in New York.
(AP Photo/Mary Altaffer, File)
The Vanguard researchers found that
the typical U.S. worker has nine employers over the course of their
career. Each switch sees a median 10% increase in pay but a drop of
0.7 percentage point in their retirement saving rate.
“The current design of many 401(k) plans does not account for
repeated job switches,” the researchers wrote in their report.
How many people is this affecting? A little more than 3 million U.S.
workers quit their jobs during August, according to the most recent
data available from the U.S. government. Those are generally workers
who wanted to leave their employer, and a big number is seen as a
sign that workers are feeling comfortable enough to switch to
another job.
It’s been trending down since hitting a peak above 4.5 million two
years ago, but it remains well above its bottom of 2 million reached
during the pandemic. The next update on how many U.S. workers are
quitting their jobs will arrive on Tuesday.
A little more than half of all U.S. households have a 401(k) or
similar plan or an individual retirement account, as of 2022,
according to Congressional Research Service.
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