The federal government has never put cash directly into a low-income worker's retirement account. That changes in 2027.
IRS Notice 2024-65, released last fall, opened the public-comment phase for the new Saver's Match. The match was created by Section 103 of SECURE 2.0 and added a new section to the tax code.
It's a real dollar match, not a tax credit.
How it actually works
The match pays 50% on the first $2,000 a worker contributes to a 401(k)-type plan or IRA, capping out at $1,000 per year. The money lands directly in the retirement account rather than offsetting a tax bill.
Eligibility phases out for single filers earning between $20,500 and $35,000, and for married joint filers between $41,000 and $71,000.
That's a sharp expansion from the existing Saver's Credit, which is non-refundable and mostly unused by lower-income filers because they don't owe enough tax to claim it.
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Why this is connected to the TrumpIRA push
The April executive order establishing TrumpIRA.gov leans heavily on the Saver's Match, since the directory will steer eligible workers toward IRAs that accept the match payment under the new rules.
Treasury still has to finalize how providers register, how the match payments flow, and what happens if a worker is later found ineligible. A Congressional Research Service summary calls the implementation work substantial but on track for the 2027 start.
What to Watch
The IRS comment window closed in November 2024, and the next set of regulations will set the operational rules - including how Treasury sends payments and which account types qualify.
For workers earning under $35,000, this is the first time the federal government has put real money into their retirement instead of just offering a tax break - a structural shift in how Americans can retire millionaires over a working lifetime. The take-up rate is the number to watch in 2027.
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