Close Menu
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook LinkedIn
Financial Market News
Subscribe Now
  • Home
  • Markets
    • Earnings
  • Banks
    • Crypto
    • Investing
  • Business
    • Retail
  • industry
    • Finance
    • Energy
    • Real Estate
  • Politics
Financial Market News
You are at:Home»Finance»Why you may be saving more in your 401(k) — and not even know it
Finance

Why you may be saving more in your 401(k) — and not even know it

May 24, 20243 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email
OLOGI Ad 2


Aleksandarnakic | E+ | Getty Images

You may be saving more money for retirement and not even know it.

An increasing share of employers are automating how people save in their company 401(k) plans, in a bid to overcome the inertia that often keeps us from building a nest egg.

“Automatic escalation” — or auto-escalation, for short — is one of those popular mechanisms.

It automatically raises workers’ savings rate each year, often by 1 percentage point at a time up to a cap. The intent is to help boost savings when workers might not take action on their own.

401(k) doesn't seem to have the same fanbase that social security has, says Allison Schrager

However, the amount of additional money coming out of each paycheck may be indiscernible to many people.

“I have a bet they don’t realize it,” said Ellen Lander, founder of Renaissance Benefit Advisors Group, based in Pearl River, New York.

However, it’s generally a good thing.

In an ideal world, workers would be saving at least 15% of their annual pay in a 401(k) plan, Lander said. This includes both their own contributions and employer contributions like a company match. The ideal rate may fluctuate depending on factors like age and outside savings.

“Philosophically, I think auto-escalation makes perfect sense,” Lander said. “We want people to save as much as they can.”

Automated 401(k) savings is more widespread

Auto-escalation has become more widespread alongside automatic enrollment, which is when employers divert a portion of workers’ paychecks into a 401(k) if they don’t sign up voluntarily.

About 64% of companies with a 401(k) plan automatically enrolled workers in 2022, according to an annual survey by the Plan Sponsor Council of America, a trade group.

Of those companies, 78% also automatically increased workers’ savings, up from 65% in 2013, according to the poll.

Most, or 84%, of these 401(k) plans raise workers’ savings rate by 1 percentage point a year.

More from Personal Finance:
U.S. centenarian population will quadruple by 2054
Why working longer is a bad retirement plan
Labor Department cracks down on bad retirement savings advice

Here’s a basic illustration of how it works: Let’s say a worker earns $75,000 a year, contributes 6% of their annual salary to a 401(k), and is paid twice a month. This person saves $4,500 a year, or $187.50 per paycheck.

Raising the savings rate to 7% brings annual savings to $5,250, or $218.75 per pay cycle — amounting to just $31.25 more per paycheck.

(This example doesn’t account for additional financial factors like taxes or annual pay increases.)

Employees can opt out of the arrangement. Employers are also obligated to send a notice to workers communicating that they are being automatically enrolled into a 401(k) and their savings rate will be increased, but such communiques may go unnoticed.

Many companies are hesitant to add auto-escalation altogether because they fear it may be “onerous” and place too much of a financial burden on some workers, Lander said.

Among 401(k) plans that use automatic enrollment, just 40% automatically escalate savings for all…



Read More: Why you may be saving more in your 401(k) — and not even know it

TGC Banner 1
401(k) plans 401k business news Employee benefits Employee pension benefits personal finance Personal saving Retiree finances Retirement planning Roth 401(k) plans saving
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleAMC, GameStop shares rally after registering biggest declines in a week
Next Article You don’t need a 20% down payment to buy a house, economist says

Related Posts

Local finance goes green as Finance New Orleans promotes climate

March 25, 2026

Trump says he could send National Guard to airports ‘for more help’

March 25, 2026

Swiss sneaker maker On Holding shakes up leadership amid slowing growth

March 25, 2026

Kuwait says Hormuz closure will trigger domino effect across the world

March 24, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Energy News

Former defence leaders outline already-present fossil fuel dependence,

Kuwait says Hormuz closure will trigger domino effect across the world

Texas leads nation in solar power installation, report finds – Houston

The economy has Strait of Hormuz deadline for Trump: Two weeks

Banks News

The Shadow of Stablecoin Regulation Looms, Crypto-Related Stocks Suffer

Glia Wins AI Excellence Award in Banking and Financial Services Category

Down 12% This Year, Nubank Plans a ‘100b Pivot’ And Investors Are Taking

JPMorgan Chase Stock Faces Headwinds Ahead of Earnings

Real Estate News

SMBC Arm, Aravest Get $165 Million for APAC Real Estate Credit

Manhattan Real Estate Report: Is this the ”It’s Always SOMETHING” moment

License EDU Launches Real Estate Continuing Education Courses in Texas

UNL Releases Preliminary Farm Real Estate Market Survey Results for

© 2026 finmar.news

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.