Molly Richardson, 35, regularly contributes to her 401(k) plan, but the structural engineer said she isn’t too worried about retirement yet.
“It’s always something I felt like I could wait until I’m 50 to figure out,” she said.
Like many other working adults, Richardson has more pressing expenses for now, she said, such as the mortgage on her home in Jacksonville, Florida, car loans and student debt.
Still, the married mother of one admits she doesn’t have a clear savings goal once those other financial obstacles are out of the way.
“It’s hard to estimate how much we are actually going to need,” she said. “There are question marks.”
In fact, 4 in 10 American workers — 40% — are behind on retirement planning and savings, largely due to debt, insufficient income or getting a late start, according to a new CNBC survey, which polled more than 6,600 U.S. adults in early August.
Older generations closer to retirement age are more likely to regret not saving for retirement early enough, the survey found: 37% of baby boomers between ages 60 and 78 said they felt behind, compared with 26% of Gen Xers, 13% of millennials, and only 5% of Gen Zers over the age of 18.
“There are so many individuals, young, mid-career and deep into their career, that are not saving enough for a healthy and secure retirement,” said Jacqueline Reeves, the director of retirement plan services at Bryn Mawr Capital Management.
By some measures, retirement savers, overall, are doing well.
As of the second quarter of 2024, 401(k) and individual retirement account balances notched the third-highest averages on record and the number of 401(k) millionaires hit an all-time high, helped by better savings behaviors and positive market conditions, according to the latest data from Fidelity Investments, the nation’s largest provider of 401(k) savings plans.
The average 401(k) contribution rate, including employer and employee contributions, now stands at 14.2%, just below Fidelity’s suggested savings rate of 15%.
And yet, there is still a gap between what savers are putting away and what they will need once they retire.
Although many employees with a workplace plan contribute just enough to take advantage of an employer match, “9% [considering a typical 5% savings rate and 4% match], mathematically speaking, will not provide enough in that piggy bank,” Reeves said.
“They call it a ‘standard safe harbor match’ for a reason,” she added. “Further in our career, we should be saving 15% to 20%.”
“I don’t think you ever feel completely caught up,” said Lisa Cutter, 56, of Terre Haute, Indiana.
Cutter, who works as an administrator in higher education, explained that it took a while before she could put anything at all toward long-term savings.
“When I first entered the workforce, I was a classroom teacher and I had no money; I was broke,” Cutter said.
Now Cutter, who is a single mom, has to prioritize her savings. She relies on the retirement tools and calculators that come with her employer-sponsored plan to stay on track.
“I would probably like to retire around 67,” she said.