About one in three Americans who change jobs cash out their 401(k) instead of rolling it over. They take the check, pay taxes and penalties, and walk away withAbout one in three Americans who change jobs cash out their 401(k) instead of rolling it over. They take the check, pay taxes and penalties, and walk away with

One in Three Americans Cashes Out Their 401(k) When Switching Jobs. By 65, It Costs Them $266,000

2026/06/23 02:17
5 min read
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The post One in Three Americans Cashes Out Their 401(k) When Switching Jobs. By 65, It Costs Them $266,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

  • One in three American workers cash out their 401(k) when changing jobs, keeping only 46 cents per dollar after taxes and penalties.
  • A $25,000 401(k) cashed out at age 30 costs $266,000 in lost compounding by retirement at 65.
  • Gen Z workers are already withdrawing from retirement accounts early, with 26% taking hardship withdrawals despite being decades from retirement.
  • The average 401(k) balance of $146,400 hides a troubling median of just $38,176, reflecting repeated cash-outs across workers' careers.
  • Americans are spending 92.6% of their disposable income with almost no emergency cushion, making retirement accounts an easy target during job transitions.
  • A direct rollover to an IRA or new employer plan costs nothing and preserves retirement compounding that cash-outs permanently destroy.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

About one in three Americans who change jobs cash out their 401(k) instead of rolling it over. They take the check, pay taxes and penalties, and walk away with far less than they started with. Over time, that decision, often made early in a career, can meaningfully reduce what they have available at retirement.

Job switching itself is common and often beneficial. Job openings totaled 7.62 million in April 2026, a level that remains elevated by historical standards. Unemployment sits at 4.3%, reflecting a labor market where workers can move for better opportunities. The issue is not the job change, but what happens to the retirement balance left behind.

The 46-Cent Dollar

Cashing out a traditional 401(k) before age 59 and a half typically triggers ordinary income tax plus a 10% federal early-withdrawal penalty. State taxes can add to the total, depending on where you live. Estimates vary, but it is common for a substantial share of the balance to be lost to taxes and penalties, leaving the worker with significantly less than the original amount.

That is the visible cost. The invisible cost is far larger.

What It Actually Costs by 65

If that same $25,000 had been rolled into an IRA or a new employer’s 401(k) and left invested for 35 years at a 7% annual return, it would grow to roughly $265,000. Even the reduced amount taken after taxes, if it had remained invested, would still compound meaningfully over time. When the money is spent instead, that future growth disappears. The long-term cost is not just what was withdrawn, but what it could have become.

Workers who cash out repeatedly compound the damage. Survey data suggest a meaningful share of younger workers have taken early, or hardship withdrawals from retirement accounts, and each withdrawal reduces the base on which future growth builds.

Why Workers Pull the Trigger

The financial cushion most households operate with is thin. The personal savings rate has declined from pandemic-era levels and remains relatively low by historical standards. At the same time, consumer sentiment has been weak, and households under financial pressure often turn to the most readily available source of cash. For some, that ends up being a 401(k) balance.

The Hole It Leaves

The leakage shows up in the balance data. Fidelity’s recent figures put the average 401(k) balance at about $146,000, with higher averages among older generations and lower balances among younger workers. Those averages look solid at first glance, but median balances are much lower. Vanguard data, for example, shows a median balance of around $38,000. The gap reflects, in part, how often accounts are drained and restarted over time.

Fidelity often suggests a retirement savings target of about 10 times final salary by age 67. For a worker earning $75,000, that implies roughly $750,000. Cashing out $25,000 early in a career does not just reduce savings by that amount, it removes the future growth that money could have generated, making the gap harder to close later.

What to Do Instead

Three steps make the difference at every job change:

  1. Roll the balance over. A direct rollover to an IRA or the new employer’s 401(k) avoids the 10% penalty and the income tax entirely. The money keeps compounding.
  2. Leave small balances where they are if the plan allows it. Plans generally require maintaining balances above $7,000, while smaller balances may be automatically distributed or rolled over, depending on the plan’s rules. Keeping the money invested, even temporarily, helps preserve compounding while you decide on the next step.
  3. If cash is the real problem, separate the two decisions. Building an emergency fund outside of retirement accounts helps avoid turning long-term savings into a short-term fix, which can be costly once taxes, penalties, and lost growth are factored in.

Job changes will keep coming. Workers who roll their balance over keep the compounding intact.

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The post One in Three Americans Cashes Out Their 401(k) When Switching Jobs. By 65, It Costs Them $266,000 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

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