Key Takeaways
- Borrowing or withdrawing from your 401(k) leads to missed potential market returns.
- A withdrawal or loan reduces your investment base, forfeiting decades of compounding growth.
- Recovery takes time—rebuilding your retirement nest egg after a withdrawal is more difficult than it seems.
The rising cost of living is one of the biggest stressors for three out of four employees, according to recent data from Fidelity Investments. For some, this can lead to a withdrawal or a loan from their 401(k). While this can offer temporary relief, it often comes at a steep long-term cost. Even a modest early withdrawal can potentially erode your nest egg by tens of thousands of dollars over time due to taxes, penalties, and lost compounding growth.
Employees Without Emergency Savings Are 2x More Likely To Take a 401(k) Loan
Fidelity Investments also found that employees without emergency funds are about twice as likely to borrow or make early withdrawals from their retirement plans.
Fast Fact
The number of people who take hardship withdrawals has risen to about 5% of participants as of 2024, compared to about 2% in 2018. 401(k) loans have also been increasing since 2021.
As more workers dip into retirement funds to cover medical bills, housing costs, and other emergencies, the absence of savings threatens both their long-term financial security and their ability to retire on time.
401(k) Withdrawal vs. 401(k) Loan
Understanding how hardship withdrawals and loans differ is key. A 401(k) withdrawal is taking out money directly from your account. These withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income. And if you’re under 59½, they’re also typically subject to a 10% early withdrawal penalty (unless you qualify for an IRS exception).
A 401(k) loan, on the other hand, allows you to borrow against your savings. You can borrow up to either:
- 50% of your vested amount or $10,000, whichever is greater
- $50,000, whichever is less
You’ll typically have to repay the balance, plus interest, within five years, though there are exceptions like using the funds to purchase a home. Unlike a 401(k) withdrawal, however, you don’t have to pay taxes or penalties when you take a 401(k) loan. Interest payments go back into your account, not to a lender, and the process doesn’t affect your credit score even if you miss a payment.
However, there’s a significant trade-off with both of these options. While that money is out of the market, you lose potential returns. In addition, if you leave or lose your job, repayment of a 401(k) loan may be due quite soon (such as by the next tax day). If you can’t pay, the balance is treated as a taxable withdrawal, which comes with a 10% penalty on the loan balance if you’re under 59½.
How a 401(k) Withdrawal or Loan Could Mean More Than $100K in Lost Retirement Savings
To see how quickly compounding can work against you, consider this: a $10,000 withdrawal at age 35 could grow to around $76,000 by age 65, assuming a 7% annual return. Depending on your tax bracket, after taxes and penalties, you’d pocket around $7,000 today—but you’d lose about $70,000 in future value.
Now imagine a scenario involving a 401(k) loan. Borrowing $25,000 at age 40 could mean around $136,000 in lost savings by age 65 once missed growth is factored in, assuming a 7% annual return.
Even though you’re essentially borrowing from yourself, you’re effectively pausing your investment and in a compounding market every missed year of growth creates a permanent setback.
Alternatives To 401(k) Loans and Withdrawals
When money is tight, dipping into your retirement fund should be a last resort. A few of these safer options can help bridge financial gaps.
- Build or maintain an emergency savings account: A dedicated cash reserve—ideally three to six months of expenses—can prevent the need to raid your 401(k). Maintaining a healthy savings cushion can mean the difference between having the cash on hand to pay for an emergency and taking a less-than-ideal 401(k) withdrawal or loan.
- Consider a personal loan or HELOC: For those with good or excellent credit, personal loans and home equity lines of credit (HELOCs) may offer competitive rates and flexible repayment terms without jeopardizing your retirement savings.
The Bottom Line
An early 401(k) withdrawal or loan may solve a short-term cash problem, but the long-term cost can be devastating. Potential taxes, penalties, and decades of lost compound growth can erode your future savings by tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Treat your 401(k) as a long-term investment vehicle, not an emergency fund, and explore your alternatives for funding before tapping into it. Your future retirement depends on it.
