401k Terms Word Search

Find 10 essential 401k and retirement terms. Click any word to understand how to maximize your employer-sponsored retirement account with real US examples.

Personal Finance 10 Terms Intermediate
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You found all the 401(k) terms. Click any word to review its definition.

A 401(k) is the most powerful retirement savings vehicle available to most American workers — and one of the least understood. Employer match, vesting schedules, contribution limits, Roth vs. traditional: these terms determine how much wealth you build over a career.

Traditional vs. Roth 401(k): The Core Decision

A Traditional 401(k) accepts pre-tax contributions — you reduce your taxable income today, but pay income taxes on withdrawals in retirement. A Roth 401(k) accepts after-tax contributions — no tax deduction now, but all qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free, including decades of compound growth. The right choice depends on your current vs. expected future tax rate. If you are early-career with a lower income, Roth often wins. If you are in your peak earning years, traditional often wins.

Employer Match: The Most Important Benefit You Might Be Leaving Behind

An employer match is free money added to your 401(k) based on your own contributions. A common match is 100% of contributions up to 3-6% of salary. If your employer matches 50% up to 6% and you earn $60,000, contributing 6% ($3,600/year) earns $1,800 in free employer contributions — an instant 50% return before any investment growth. The cardinal rule: always contribute at least enough to capture the full employer match.

Vesting Schedules and Contribution Limits

A vesting schedule determines when employer contributions legally become yours. Cliff vesting gives you 100% ownership after a set period (often 3 years). Graded vesting phases ownership in incrementally. Your own contributions are always 100% vested immediately. The 2024 IRS contribution limit is $23,000 for employee contributions, with a $7,500 catch-up for those 50 and older. Total contributions (employee + employer) cannot exceed $69,000. Required Minimum Distributions must begin at age 73.

Want to go deeper? Read our full guide: What Is a 401(k)?

Frequently Asked Questions About 401(k) Retirement Accounts

What happens to my 401(k) if I leave my job?

You have four options: leave it with your former employer (if balance exceeds $5,000), roll it over to your new employer's 401(k), roll it over to an IRA, or cash it out. Cashing out triggers income taxes plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty if under 59.5 — typically the worst option. Rolling over to an IRA often gives the most investment flexibility and lowest fees.

What is the difference between a 401(k) and an IRA?

A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored plan with a 2024 contribution limit of $23,000. An IRA is opened independently with a 2024 limit of $7,000. 401(k)s often include employer matching; IRAs do not. IRAs typically offer more investment choices. The optimal strategy: contribute to the 401(k) up to the employer match, then max a Roth IRA, then return to the 401(k) if additional capacity remains.

At what age can I withdraw from my 401(k) without penalty?

Penalty-free withdrawals begin at age 59.5. Before that, withdrawals are subject to ordinary income tax plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty, with limited exceptions (death, disability, certain medical expenses). Required Minimum Distributions must begin at age 73.

What does vesting mean in a 401(k)?

Vesting refers to ownership of employer contributions. Your own salary deferrals are always 100% vested immediately. Employer matching becomes yours according to a vesting schedule. Under cliff vesting, you might own 0% for two years then suddenly 100%. Under graded vesting, ownership increases incrementally. Check your vesting schedule before changing jobs — leaving before full vesting means forfeiting unvested employer contributions.

Should I contribute to a 401(k) or pay off debt first?

Always contribute at least enough to capture the full employer match first — that is typically a 50-100% instant return. After the match, compare debt interest rate to expected investment return. High-interest debt above 7-8% should generally be prioritized. Low-interest debt below 4-5% is typically worth carrying while maximizing retirement contributions.

Vocabulary Definitions

Study these terms before or after solving the puzzle. Each definition includes a real-world US example.

VESTING

Vesting is the process by which an employee earns full ownership of employer contributions to a 401k plan over time. Employer matching funds are often subject to a vesting schedule — you must stay at the company for a certain number of years to keep them. Immediate vesting means you own all employer contributions from day one; cliff vesting means you own nothing until a set date, then 100%.

Real example: Your employer matches 50% of your 401k contributions up to 6% of salary. With a 3-year cliff vesting schedule, if you leave after 2 years, you keep your own contributions but forfeit all employer matches. After 3 years, you keep everything — a powerful incentive to stay.

MATCHING

Employer matching is when your company contributes to your 401k based on your own contributions. A common match is 50% of your contributions up to 6% of your salary. This is often described by financial educators as one of the most straightforward ways to increase retirement savings. Note: consulting a licensed financial advisor is recommended before making contribution decisions.

Real example: On a $70,000 salary with a 50% match up to 6%, contributing 6% ($4,200/year) earns you $2,100 in free employer money annually. Over 30 years at 7% growth, that $2,100/year in free matching money alone grows to over $200,000 — from employer contributions you would otherwise forfeit.

ROTH

A Roth 401k allows employees to contribute after-tax dollars, meaning contributions do not reduce taxable income today but qualified withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free, including all growth. Roth accounts are generally more advantageous for younger workers who expect to be in a higher tax bracket in retirement than they are today.

Real example: A 25-year-old contributing $10,000/year to a Roth 401k for 40 years at 7% growth accumulates approximately $2 million — all of which can be withdrawn tax-free in retirement. In a traditional 401k, those withdrawals would be taxed at ordinary income rates, potentially reducing the after-tax value by 20–30%.

ROLLOVER

A rollover is the process of moving funds from one retirement account to another — typically from a 401k at a former employer to an IRA or a new employer's 401k. Direct rollovers transfer funds directly between accounts and avoid taxes and penalties. Failing to roll over properly (taking the cash directly) triggers income taxes plus a 10% early withdrawal penalty if you are under 59½.

Real example: When you leave a job with $85,000 in your 401k, you can roll it directly into an IRA. If instead you take a check, your employer withholds 20% ($17,000) for taxes, and you must deposit the full $85,000 into an IRA within 60 days to avoid penalties — requiring you to come up with the $17,000 from your own pocket.

PRETAX

Pre-tax contributions to a traditional 401k are deducted from your paycheck before income taxes are calculated, reducing your current taxable income. Every dollar contributed pre-tax saves you money now at your current marginal tax rate. The tradeoff is that withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income.

Real example: Contributing $19,500/year to a traditional 401k reduces your federal taxable income by $19,500. In the 22% bracket, that saves $4,290 in federal taxes that year — a significant immediate benefit. For high-income earners in the 32%+ bracket, the pre-tax benefit is even more valuable.

WITHDRAWAL

A 401k withdrawal is when you take money out of your retirement account. Qualified withdrawals after age 59½ are taxed as ordinary income but avoid the 10% early withdrawal penalty. Early withdrawals (before 59½) are both taxed as income AND subject to a 10% penalty — making them extremely costly. Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs) mandate withdrawals starting at age 73.

Real example: Withdrawing $30,000 from a 401k at age 45 in the 22% bracket costs $6,600 in income taxes plus $3,000 in penalty (10%) — a total of $9,600 lost to taxes and penalties, leaving only $20,400. This 32% total cost illustrates the significant financial impact of early withdrawals. Consult a licensed financial advisor before making withdrawal decisions.

LIMIT

The IRS sets annual contribution limits on how much can be contributed to a 401k. For 2024, the employee contribution limit is $23,000, with an additional $7,500 catch-up contribution allowed for those 50 and older. Total contributions (employee plus employer) cannot exceed $69,000. These limits apply per person across all employers if you work multiple jobs.

Real example: A 52-year-old can contribute up to $30,500 to their 401k in 2024 ($23,000 standard + $7,500 catch-up). If their employer adds $6,000 in matching, the total going into the account is $36,500 that year — all growing tax-deferred.

FUND

Within a 401k, you choose how your contributions are invested among the fund options your employer offers. Most plans include index funds (broad market exposure at low cost), target-date funds (automatically adjusting asset allocation as you approach retirement), bond funds, and sometimes company stock. Your fund selection determines your investment returns and risk level.

Real example: A Vanguard Target Retirement 2055 Fund automatically holds ~90% stocks and 10% bonds for young workers, gradually shifting to 50/50 by retirement. This single fund provides complete diversification across thousands of US and international stocks at an expense ratio of just 0.08%.

BALANCE

Your 401k balance is the current total value of your retirement account, including your contributions, employer contributions, and all investment gains or losses. Monitoring your balance — without obsessing over short-term fluctuations — helps you track progress toward retirement goals. A common benchmark is to have 1× your salary saved by 30, 3× by 40, 6× by 50, and 8× by 60.

Real example: Fidelity's Q3 2024 report found the average 401k balance for workers in their 50s was approximately $206,000 — significantly below the target of 6× the median US salary of ~$55,000 ($330,000). This gap highlights why maximizing contributions and employer matching is so critical.

COMPOUND

Compound growth inside a 401k is the primary mechanism that builds retirement wealth. Every dollar earned through investment returns is reinvested and earns its own returns in future periods. Because 401k contributions grow tax-deferred, there is no annual tax drag on gains — allowing the full compounding effect to work. This makes starting early in a 401k dramatically more valuable than starting later.

Real example: Contributing $6,000/year to a 401k from age 25 to 65 at 8% returns produces approximately $1.68 million. Starting at 35 instead and contributing the same amount produces only $733,000 — less than half — despite contributing for only 10 fewer years. Those first 10 years compound for 40 years.

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