Fly On Wall Street

With recession looming, more Americans tap retirement funds for cash. But is it a good idea?

Americans feeling the pinch of high inflation are raiding their retirement savings, an ominous sign for a country that already struggles to save for old age.

The share of workers taking cash from their employer retirement plans as new loans, non-hardship withdrawals, and hardship withdrawals has all been on the rise this year, but the “most concerning is the rise in hardship withdrawals,” according to Vanguard Group, which tracks five million savers.

People can dip into their 401(k) plans to borrow up to $50,000 as a loan to be repaid to their account, or take a non-hardship withdrawal while they’re still working for their company. But if they’re taking money out without a valid and serious financial need (that would be a hardship withdrawal), they’ll likely pay a 10% withdrawal penalty, and the IRS will likely withhold 20% of the amount withdrawn for taxes.

The share of those taking hardship withdrawals from their 401(k) retirement plans in October reached 0.5%, the highest level since 2004 when Vanguard began tracking the data, it said.

Hardship withdrawals are often the last resort for people needing money, and this could be a sign of how deep consumers’ financial distress may be running. They’re only allowed to cover an “immediate and heavy financial need,” according to IRS rules, and are subject to income taxes and, potentially, a 10% early withdrawal penalty. For a $10,000 hardship withdrawal, for example, taxpayers in the 22% bracket would owe $1,000 in penalties plus $2,200 in income tax.

“We know that inflation has eroded employees’ purchasing power and is likely creating strain on family budgets,” said Tom Armstrong, vice president of customer analytics & insight at Voya Financial, a retirement, investment and insurance company.

And without emergency savings, the fallback plan is often retirement nest eggs. Employees without adequate emergency savings are 13 times more likely to take a hardship withdrawal and three times more likely to take a loan from their retirement plan, according to Voya data.

When strapped for cash, is dipping into retirement savings a good plan?

Not if you can help it.

“While we understand that, in some cases, individuals may have no choice but to tap their retirement accounts, it’s important to remember that people work hard for their retirement savings and should dip into them as a last resort,” Armstrong said.

A hardship withdrawal can give you immediate access to cash, but it comes with significant financial impacts. Not only are there the immediate taxes and penalties to consider but also the longer-term retirement consequences.

You may not be able to contribute to your workplace retirement plan for six months or more, and you could lose the compounding growth of your investments, said Nilay Gandhi, Vanguard senior wealth adviser. Compounding grows your money exponentially because you earn a return on both your original investment and on returns you received previously on that investment.

But if you must tap your retirement savings, you might want to consider these two options first, Gandhi says:

How can I access cash without withdrawing from retirement savings?

Before turning to retirement savings for cash, consider some of the following options first:

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