The post The 401(k) Vesting Cliff That Cost a 59-Year-Old $74,000: Make Sure You Know Your Timeline appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A 59-year-old engineer posted on r/personalfinance after discovering she would forfeit roughly $74,000 in employer match by accepting a new job 14 months before her old plan’s six-year vesting cliff finished. Her base 401(k) balance sat near $1.3 million, so the forfeiture barely showed in the statement. The compounded cost at age 66 looked very different.
This is the most expensive 401(k) mistake pre-retirees make, and it never appears on a quarterly statement. ERISA lets employers stretch vesting on matching contributions to six years on a graded schedule or three years on a cliff. For high earners stacking match dollars in the final decade of work, those schedules quietly govern five- and six-figure outcomes.
A senior manager earning $220,000 contributes enough to capture a 6% employer match: about $13,200 a year. Over four-and-a-half years at the firm, the employer side of the account, including market growth, reaches roughly $74,000 in unvested money alongside $49,000 that has vested.
Under a standard six-year graded schedule, vesting steps look like this:
Forfeited dollars do not transfer to your IRA, new 401(k), or taxable account. The plan recycles them to pay administrative expenses or fund future employer contributions for remaining participants.
Treating the $74,000 as a static loss understates the damage. A pre-retiree who leaves at 59 and retires at 66 loses seven years of tax-deferred growth. At a 7% blended return, the forfeited match would have grown to roughly $119,000 by retirement. That is real lifestyle: an extra $4,750 a year at a 4% withdrawal rate, or about $4,000 of annual dividends at Schwab U.S. Dividend Equity ETF’s (NYSEARCA:SCHD) 3.3% yield.
The Bureau of Economic Analysis reports the personal savings rate fell to 3.7% in the first quarter of 2026, down from 6.2% two years earlier. With median full-time weekly earnings at $1,235, the forfeited match equals more than a year of pretax median wages. Baby boomers carry an average 401(k) balance of $267,900, so a high-balance saver forfeiting $74,000 is giving back roughly a quarter of what an average peer accumulated over a lifetime.
Workers in their late 50s and early 60s sit in the contribution sweet spot. The 2026 standard 401(k) limit is $24,500, with a $8,000 catch-up at age 50 and a $11,250 super catch-up for those age 60 to 63. SECURE 2.0 now forces that catch-up money into Roth treatment if 2025 wages exceeded $150,000, which describes the exact demographic switching jobs into senior consulting and advisory roles.
Higher salary in the final decade means higher match dollars per year of service, exposing more money when vesting is incomplete. The cost of a poorly timed exit at 58 is materially larger than the same exit at 38.
The vesting schedule is the only line in a 401(k) that punishes you for moving. Read it before HR sends the exit paperwork.
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The post The 401(k) Vesting Cliff That Cost a 59-Year-Old $74,000: Make Sure You Know Your Timeline appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


