To retire as soon as possible, you must avoid three 401(k) pitfalls throughout your working years - high account fees, underperforming investments, and improper asset allocation. These pitfalls can cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars by the time you retire. The best small business 401(k) plans make these pitfalls easy to avoid – which can help you retire years sooner. Given the stakes, you should settle for no less.
Not sure your small business 401(k) plan fits the bill? Here are the 401(k) pitfalls you want to avoid and how certain features of the best 401(k) plans can help you avoid them.
To retire as soon as possible, you must avoid three 401(k) pitfalls throughout your working years:
Your plan’s administration fees are not paid by your employer, they will be deducted from plan assets. The portion deducted from YOUR ACCOUNT will lower your investment returns dollar-for-dollar. High account fees will reduce your 401(k) investment returns needlessly.
The irony? Studies show index funds tend to outperform comparable active funds (i.e., funds with the same benchmark) over time. Underperforming investments are active funds that underperform comparable index funds, net-of-fees.
Maintaining an appropriate asset allocation over the years based on your target retirement date is important. Otherwise, you could miss out on gains by investing too conservatively when young or sustain unrecoverable losses by investing too aggressively when older.
The stakes are high. These pitfalls could cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars in lost principal and compound interest by the time you retire.
The best 401(k) plans make it easy to avoid the pitfalls that needlessly lower investment returns. Here are their features:
All direct and indirect 401(k) administration fees have the same net effect – they’ll reduce your investment returns dollar-for-dollar. That means you want to keep their total amount as low as possible. Only direct fees make it easy to know how much your 401(k) account is paying.
I have never seen an index fund from leading providers such as Vanguard, Fidelity, or Schwab that isn’t cost-efficient. They meet their investment objective (market-correlated returns) for low fees across the board. You can try to earn more net-of-fees with active funds, but the odds are not on your side.
Most 401(k) plans today offer one or more of the three basic forms - Target-Date Funds (TDFs), a financial advisor, or “robo” (algorithm-based) advice. To pick the best form for you, you should weigh its pros and cons.
Avoiding 401(k) pitfalls can mean dramatically higher account returns for you. An Aon Hewitt study found professional investment advice increased the investment returns of plan participants by 3.32% annually, while our latest 401(k) fee study found that some plan participants were paying as much as $2,181.34 in annual administration fees.
In short, you owe to your future self to avoid the 401(k) pitfalls that rob investment returns. Even small annual savings today can mean much greater savings in retirement due to the power of compound interest. If your 401(k) plan doesn’t make that job easy for you, lobby for a better one.