Millions of workers fund their 401(k) accounts every pay period and assume that alone will carry them to a secure retirement.
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Vanguard, which administers retirement plans for nearly five million participants, warns that several routine oversights are steadily damaging those balances.
In one of its guides, the investment firm lays out a checklist for retirement plan participants. Falling short on any of these can drain potential savings over decades.
Many employers match 401(k) contributions at 50 cents on the dollar, or even dollar-for-dollar, up to a set percentage of pay. Vanguard describes the match as a guaranteed return of at least 50% and potentially up to 100% on every dollar a worker contributes.
No other investment in personal finance offers that kind of immediate, risk-free upside, yet workers routinely contribute below the threshold needed to collect it.
“When you don’t contribute enough to get your full 401(k) match, you’re basically turning down free money, and that missed opportunity compounds in a big way over time,” Taylor Kovar, certified financial planner and CEO of 11 Financial, told GOBankingRates.
When a plan matches 100% up to 6% of salary, and you contribute only 3%, half of that guaranteed return disappears every single pay period.
The correction requires checking your plan’s match formula and raising your deferral rate to the minimum percentage required to capture the full match, Vanguard noted.
The person named as your 401(k) beneficiary takes legal priority over whatever your will says, regardless of what you intended when you wrote it.
An outdated designation can send your entire retirement balance to an ex-spouse or a relative you no longer intended to receive those savings.
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Vanguard warns that life events such as marriage, divorce, and the birth of a child often leave the old name on the account for years.
Vanguard calls naming a beneficiary the single best way to make sure your retirement plan money goes to the people you want to receive it.
The firm says updating that designation is essential whenever your life circumstances change, including after a marriage, a divorce, or the birth of a child.
If you have switched employers more than once during your career, there is a strong chance you have multiple retirement accounts sitting with former plans.
Vanguard flags this scattered approach as a visibility problem because savings spread across several plans make it difficult to evaluate your true overall allocation.
That fragmentation can obscure whether your portfolio is properly diversified or whether you carry excessive concentration in a single asset class without knowing it.
Consolidating old accounts into one plan gives you a clearer picture of your total retirement position and simplifies ongoing management, the firm noted.
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Most 401(k) plans offer an automatic contribution increase that raises your deferral rate by one to two percentage points each year.
Vanguard warns that declining this option carries a compounding cost that later contributions, no matter how generous, will struggle to fully repair.
Today’s 401(k) plans are not just about saving; they’re about building a financial future for millions of Americans. The advancements we’ve seen in plan design, from auto enrollment to higher default rates, make a real difference.
Vanguard’s How America Saves research found that workers enrolled in plans with both automatic enrollment and automatic annual increases save 20% to 30% more after three years than workers in automatic-enrollment plans without automatic annual increases.
Vanguard frames the employer match as the leading item on its checklist, but the firm also makes clear that matching contributions alone will not build the savings most workers need.
The firm recommends a total savings rate of 12% to 15% of pay, including both employee contributions and whatever the employer adds on top.
For context, the Internal Revenue Service set the 2026 employee deferral limit at $24,500, with an $8,000 catch-up available for workers aged 50 and older.
Workers between the ages of 60 and 63 can contribute a super catch-up of $11,250 in place of the standard $8,000 catch-up under rules from the SECURE 2.0 Act, allowing total contributions of up to $35,750, the IRS reported.
A worker whose employer match brings total contributions to roughly 8% of pay still faces a meaningful shortfall relative to the recommended range.
Many plans now allow workers to split contributions between pre-tax and Roth accounts, and Vanguard’s checklist notes that those who skip this option may miss a useful tax-planning opportunity.
Pre-tax contributions reduce your taxable income in the current year, but withdrawals in retirement will be taxed as ordinary income at whatever rate applies then.
Roth contributions come from after-tax income, but qualified withdrawals of both contributions and earnings are entirely tax-free after age 59-and-a-half with a five-year holding period.
Vanguard notes that many plans allow a combination of both contribution types, as long as total deferrals stay within the annual IRS limit of $24,500.
Splitting the contributions creates two tax buckets in retirement, giving a saver the option to draw from pre-tax or Roth, depending on which treatment is more favorable in any given year.
Across all items on its checklist, Vanguard frames the cost of inaction as a compounding gap that later contributions cannot fully close.
Related: Vanguard drops playbook on retirement income
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This story was originally published June 14, 2026 at 6:03 PM.