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About 1 in 6 working Americans don't have a 401(k) at work. Most of them weren't getting the federal retirement match Congress wrote into law four years ago.
The Trump White House just connected those two facts.
The order, first reported by Semafor, sets up a new website called TrumpIRA.gov. Workers can use it to research private-sector retirement plans, compare them, and sign up.
Those plans can then receive a federal matching contribution worth up to $1,000 a year. This is not a brand-new benefit.
The match itself comes from the Saver's Match, a piece of the 2022 Secure 2.0 law that takes effect in tax year 2027. The eligibility numbers are tight:
A 2025 Morningstar study said eligible Americans who actually use the match could end up with about 12% more wealth at retirement.
Trump first floated this idea during his February State of the Union speech. The order signed Thursday is the first concrete piece of that plan to reach the public.
The bigger story is who couldn't tap that money before this week.
Per the Pew Charitable Trusts, about 56 million U.S. workers have no 401(k) or any other retirement plan through their job. The Economic Innovation Group, a bipartisan think tank, says 26 million of those workers qualify for the Saver's Match. They just have nowhere to receive it.
That is the gap TrumpIRA.gov is built to close. Think of the matching dollars as a coupon Congress already printed. Most low-income workers had no store to redeem it at.
The order also tells the White House to work with Congress on a law that would expand both the coverage and the size of the match.
Teresa Ghilarducci, an economist at The New School, has researched this exact problem with NEC Director Kevin Hassett. She said making the program permanent through Congress would help the policy stick beyond a single White House.
Two existing bills already touch the same problem.
The Retirement Savings for Americans Act would create portable, tax-friendly accounts. The Automatic IRA Act would push employers with more than 10 workers to enroll people on their own.
States haven't waited. Seventeen of them have passed laws creating auto-IRAs for workers whose bosses don't offer a plan.
Shai Akabas of the Bipartisan Policy Center said the federal push only really moves the needle if Congress turns the order into law.
He also said the value of the order is that it gives workers a clearer path to set up an account. Most people don't take these steps on their own without a nudge.
The site doesn't exist yet. The matching dollars don't flow until tax year 2027.
The legal piece still depends on a Congress that hasn't passed a retirement reform of this size in years. The match has been on the books since 2022. The way to actually get it just showed up.
Policymakers will also have to map out the cost to both the U.S. and to employers, and how the new plans should be set up. Akabas said those details still need to be worked through.