Have You Left a 401(k) Behind? Here’s Why That “Forgotten” Account Could Be Costing You Big
Job hopping is the new normal. Over a career, many people will work for a dozen employers or more—and each job may come with its own 401(k).
The problem? Millions of those old workplace plans are getting left behind, ignored, or truly forgotten. Recent research estimates roughly 32 million “forgotten” 401(k) accounts in the U.S., holding more than $2 trillion in assets, with an average balance of about $66,000 per account.
A recent Wall Street Journal piece highlighted a particularly painful angle: many small-balance 401(k)s are automatically moved into low-yield “safe harbor” IRAs when workers leave, where fees can quietly eat more than the account earns in interest—even in years when the stock market is booming.
Let’s unpack what’s going on, why it matters, and what you can do about it.
A 401(k) becomes “forgotten” or “left behind” when:
Under the SECURE 2.0 law, employers now have the option to force out (without your ongoing involvement) balances up to $7,000 when you leave, up from the previous limit of $5,000. Balances between $1,000 and $7,000 are generally rolled into a safe-harbor IRA, while $1,000 or less can be cashed out.
On paper this is meant to protect workers from cashing out small accounts and to reduce admin headaches for employers. But in practice, it can create a large and growing pile of small, scattered, poorly invested accounts.
It’s easy to shrug off a $2,000 or $4,000 old 401(k) as “not worth the paperwork.” But compounding can turn that “small” amount into a very big deal.
For example, imagine you left $3,000 in an old plan that gets rolled into a safe-harbor IRA earning roughly 1% per year in a cash-like investment, while a well-diversified portfolio might reasonably target something closer to 7% over decades (not guaranteed, just a planning assumption):
That’s nearly $19,000 of potential growth left on the table—from just one small, forgotten account.
Scale that across multiple jobs and multiple old 401(k)s, and you can see how researchers estimate that forgotten accounts can cost an individual hundreds of thousands of dollars over a career and collectively add up to billions in lost investment gains.
Several trends are colliding:
All of this contributes to the estimated $2.1 trillion sitting in forgotten accounts—almost a quarter of all 401(k) assets.
If you’ve worked for more than a couple of employers, odds are decent that some retirement money is out there with your name on it. Here’s how to track it down:
Even one clue—like a recordkeeper’s name—can help you locate an account.
Ask HR or the benefits department:
If the company has merged or closed, they may still have a successor entity or custodian managing old plans.
A few key tools:
If your balance was between $1,000 and $7,000 when you left, your old employer may have:
Your former employer or the plan’s old statements should tell you which custodian received that rollover.
Finding the money is step one. Step two is making it work for you again.
Common options (each with pros and cons):
Roll it into your current employer’s 401(k).A financial professional can help you evaluate fees, investment options, and your broader retirement plan before you move anything.
Going forward, you can make a habit of never leaving a 401(k) behind:
When you accept a new job, immediately note:
Before your last day, ask HR for:
Keep a simple spreadsheet or note on your phone with:
The goal is to consolidate over time, not accumulate a trail of small, scattered accounts.
Forgotten 401(k)s aren’t just an administrative nuisance—they’re a quiet drain on Americans’ retirement security. With trillions of dollars sitting in neglected accounts and new rules enabling more small balances to be forced into safe-harbor IRAs, this problem isn’t going away on its own. NRMLA+2Wall Street Journal+2
If you’ve changed jobs a few times, assume you might have retirement money out there working far less hard than it could be. Take an afternoon to track it down, consolidate where it makes sense, and get those dollars back into a thoughtful investment strategy.
Your future self—standing at the doorstep of retirement—will be very glad you didn’t leave that money behind.