When you change jobs, it's easy to focus on the new opportunities ahead—salary bumps, new colleagues, and fresh challenges. But in the shuffle, one critical item often gets left behind: your old 401(k).
According to recent studies, there are millions of "orphaned" 401(k) accounts in the US, holding trillions of dollars in assets. While leaving the money there might seem like the path of least resistance, it can be a costly mistake.
1. The Hidden Cost of Fees
Many employer-sponsored plans have administrative fees that are passed on to participants. While you were an employee, your company might have covered some of these costs, but as a former employee, you could be footing the entire bill.
"Over a period of 20 years, an additional 1% in fees can reduce your total retirement balance by nearly 20%."
By rolling over to an IRA, you often gain access to low-cost index funds and ETFs that can significantly lower your expense ratios, keeping more money in your pocket for compound growth.
2. Investment Choices
Most 401(k) plans offer a limited "menu" of investment options—often fewer than 20 funds. If you're looking to diversify into specific sectors, real estate (REITs), or individual stocks, you're out of luck.
An Individual Retirement Account (IRA) opens the door to the entire investment universe. You can tailor your portfolio to match your exact risk tolerance and retirement timeline, rather than settling for a "one-size-fits-all" target date fund.
3. Simplification and Control
If you change jobs five times in your career, do you really want to manage five different login credentials, five different statements, and five different customer service lines?
Consolidating your accounts gives you a clear picture of your net worth. It makes rebalancing your portfolio easier and ensures that your asset allocation remains consistent with your goals.
When Should You Stay?
There are rare cases where staying put makes sense. For example, if your old plan has access to a unique institutional fund with ultra-low fees that isn't available to retail investors, or if you need legal protections from creditors that 401(k)s provide more robustly than IRAs in some states.
Conclusion
Your retirement savings represent years of hard work. Don't let them stagnate in a forgotten account. A rollover is a tax-free transfer that puts you back in the driver's seat of your financial future.