Employees are increasingly left on their own to fund their retirements.
The median net worth of families investing regularly in a 401(k) or IRA-type of retirement savings accounts rose to $443,000 by 2022, but it was just $47,450 for nonparticipating families, according to the Employment Benefits Research Institute (EBRI). Social Security will only provide a fraction of the income you will need to live on once you retire, and the number of U.S. workers whose companies provide full pensions during retirement has plunged to just 15%, EBRI reports.
“It’s scary that nearly two thirds of people actually think they are eligible for a [company] pension when we [experts] all know where that number actually is,” said Peter Kapinos, head of workplace and investment marketing at Empower Financial Services.
Many people, especially low-income workers, don’t know where to start or feel it’s impossible to save for retirement on a limited income, especially with inflation making groceries, gas and energy so expensive. But with a little knowledge, anyone can take steps toward securing a better future, experts said. Here’s their advice on how to approach your retirement saving.
Start now, start small
Your workplace might have free “company 401(k) matches” or employee benefits that can ease the job of saving for your later years.
Employers, banks or brokerage firms can also make retirement saving easy by automating your deposits. Once you sign up, they will pluck money from each paycheck before you receive it and plop it right into your tax-deferred retirement savings account.
Automating those deposits with each payday lets you pay yourself first, in essence. The sums accumulate quickly, and depending on your selection, your savings can grow tax deferred, meaning you don’t pay taxes on the money now, just much later when you actually withdraw the funds.
“Just start somewhere. It’s not as bad as you think. And you are not helpless,” said Minneapolis-resident Sarah Auna, who makes roughly $25,000 a year.