The average 401(k) just hit an all-time high - but the median didn't come close. Those two numbers tell very different stories about how workers are saving for retirement.
The Number Everyone's Talking About
The average 401(k) balance hit a record $167,970 last year, up about 13% from the year before. That's the headline figure most news outlets run with.
Most of the credit goes to the stock market's strong run, plus steady worker contributions and employer matches.
The catch: workers didn't suddenly save more - the market did the heavy lifting.
Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what numbers like these actually mean for your money in five minutes a day - and a free 45-minute investing masterclass comes with it when you join.
Why The Median Tells A Different Story
Averages are easy to misread. A small group of very large accounts at the top can pull the average way up, making the typical saver look richer than they really are.
The median 401(k) balance was just $44,115, which means half of savers have more and half have less. That's a fraction of the average.
The gap exists because retirement savings are stacked at the top. A small group of older, higher-income workers with decades of growth behind them carry most of the weight.
For most workers, the gap between the average and the median is the gap between the headline and reality.
It also helps explain why so many savers see headlines about record balances and feel like they're falling behind. The headline isn't describing them - it's describing the top of the pile.
The Forces Behind The Numbers
Auto-enrollment has pushed more workers into 401(k) plans, which lifts the bottom end of savers over time. But default contribution rates are often set around 3% to 4% of salary, which limits how fast those balances grow.
Employer matches help too. Workers who get a full match can roughly double their savings rate, but many people leave free matching money on the table by not contributing enough to capture it.
Those two forces explain why the average keeps climbing - even when most workers feel like they're barely keeping up.
What To Watch
A 30-year-old with $50,000 saved is on a very different track than a 55-year-old with the same balance. Age matters a lot more than any single headline number, because every extra year in the market gives savings more time to grow.
The benchmark that matters is what you'd need by your own retirement age - not what the average American has today.
A common rule of thumb:
- One year's salary saved by age 30
- Three times your salary by 40
- Six times your salary by 50, eight times by 60
The point isn't to hit those numbers exactly. It's to compare yourself against a real benchmark instead of a stat that's skewed by the top of the curve.
Those targets put the average and the median in proper context.
The record is nice, but the median is the better mirror.
Join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs every weekday morning, and a free investing masterclass is thrown in as a bonus.
