Fly On Wall Street

Personal finance: 7 ways employers set up millennials to fail at retirement saving

You’ve got a workplace retirement plan. Fabulous! But there’s plenty your employer likely isn’t telling you — or doing for you —that’s costing you money. Here’s how your employer might be letting you down:

But many employers set your default contribution rate too low to earn the maximum match. If the plan set you up to contribute 3% of your salary, your match would be just 1.5%. Callan, a benefits consulting firm, reports that just four in 10 plans chose a default contribution rate for employees that would ensure the maximum match. Lesson: Make sure you contribute at least enough to earn the maximum match. Not sure? Ping HR ASAP.

If your workplace lacks an escalation, step up and follow your own auto-escalation plan. Pick an annual date — birthday, hiring anniversary — and circle back to raise your contribution rate by at least one percentage point. Power move: Any time you get a raise, instantly siphon off at least half of it for retirement.

Younger adults should consider a Roth. You’ve likely yet to hit your peak earnings. So, your federal income tax bracket is lower. The value of the upfront tax break on a traditional account isn’t all that. The other issue is that right now tax rates are near historic lows, and the federal deficit sure isn’t. That suggests rates aren’t likely to stay low forever. Paying tax now on your retirement money — by saving in a Roth — is one way to insulate yourself from higher tax rates decades from now.

The loan option should be considered only for true financial emergencies: making rent and putting food on the table. Not to finance “wants.” Yet Transamerica reports 25% of millennials who borrowed from their retirement account used the money to purchase a car.

Permanently withdrawing money years before retirement is an even costlier mistake. Once you leave a job, federal rules that cover 401(k)s allow you to cash out those savings. Tempting for younger workers with smaller balances. Tell yourself it’s “just $10,000,” and you could use the money right now. Some employers force cash-outs for balances below $5,000. Others insist that if you want to cash out, it’s an all-or-nothing deal.

What would truly help boost retirement security is for employers to allow partial cash-outs (many do) and most importantly, show the opportunity cost — forgoing years of compounding — of cashing out today.

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