How to Handle a Job Change Without Derailing Your Retirement Plans
Key Takeaways
- A job change can jolt your finances, but pausing decisions and avoiding withdrawals can help protect your retirement plan.
- Stabilizing cash flow, building a small cushion and avoiding 401(k) cash-outs are key steps to keeping retirement savings on track.
- Once income steadies, restart contributions, review your new plan’s fees and match, and check risk levels to keep your strategy strong.
How a Job Change Can Shape Your Retirement Path
If you’re one of the millions of Americans who has lost a job in 2025, you’ve likely felt both the emotional strain and the financial shock that come with a layoff. Job loss interrupts cash flow, which often leads people to pause contributions or tap retirement accounts.
Such a transition can bring “emotional turbulence and financial leakage,” says Stu Bradley, wealth advisor at Hightower Wealth Advisors St. Louis. When evaluating your next steps, he says, “an effective approach ultimately slows down the emotion, and it fills those leaks so that we have a better chance of keeping requirement plans intact.”
Bradley describes a job loss as being “in a plane and suddenly it’s losing altitude” and that the first step is to stabilize the situation. When workers leave an employer, rushed decisions—such as incorrect rollovers or account liquidations—can cause permanent damage to long-term compounding. Stabilizing income and thinking through decisions helps prevent those missteps and protects future growth.
Why This Matters to You
Career changes are common and have the potential to erode retirement savings. You can protect your future financial security and ensure long-term growth by stabilizing cash flow, consolidating accounts and maintaining contributions—even at modest increases—at your next job.
What to Do Now to Keep Your Retirement Savings on Track
To protect and rebuild your retirement savings, “stabilize the short-term cash flow while protecting the long-term assets,” Bradley suggests. “So that would mean building a three- to six- month liquidity buffer if you didn’t have it, avoiding any 401(k) cash-outs, and then consolidating the 401(k) accounts.”
During a transition, you may need temporary or flexible income to avoid tapping retirement accounts. Some people explore entrepreneurship or self-employment, Bradley says. If you take either route, remember to budget for health insurance and set up a retirement plan such as a solo 401(k) or SEP IRA.
Consulting is another common bridge option. “If you’re in that job hunt transition and you need income, a transition within a transition might be to start doing some consulting in an area where you’re an expert, and just making sure you charge a fee that will cover your overhead,” Bradley says. A useful guideline is to take the hourly rate you previously earned and add roughly 40% to cover costs like health care.
When you’re ready to consolidate 401(k) retirement accounts, a direct transfer to an individual retirement account (IRA) is the best approach, he says. If your former employer cuts you a check directly from your account, that can trigger penalties and a loss of compounding, so it’s important to understand how to transfer your funds to a new account. (Learn more about rolling over a 401(k).) A direct transfer of funds from these older accounts will ensure you don’t incur large tax withholdings when you consolidate, Bradley says.
Once your income stabilizes, Bradley recommends reestablishing your automated savings. “Revisit your retirement savings rate and the asset allocation,” he says. Even a modest increase can pay off.
“If you can just simply make a small increase of, say, 1% per year in that new job, that over the long haul can create a significant long-term lift that you get the benefit of in your retirement years,” he says.
When you do get a new job, review the details of your new employer’s retirement plans. New employer plans are not identical to old ones, so you’ll want to ask these questions:
Getting familiar with how your new plan works will help you rebuild savings confidently and avoid surprises down the road.
How to Keep Your Retirement on Track Once Things Settle
After you’ve restored savings, consolidated accounts and restarted contributions, the next step is to keep your retirement strategy working for you for the long term.
You’ll want to revisit your retirement plan at regular intervals, checking that your savings rate still fits your income, confirming that investment fees remain reasonable and that your portfolio risk level matches your long-term goals as your career evolves.
As you evaluate your career and financial options, Bradley recommends several resources:
- Retirement plan comparison tools from sources like FINRA and the Department of Labor
- Your wealth advisor, if you have one, to help with your financial situation and your job hunt
- Community groups for people going through job transitions
Related Education
And remember: You’ll make it through a career transition. Bradley recalled a client who successfully got through multiple challenges at once—a divorce, job loss and severe back pain. “Sometimes we’re in the depths of one of these things [and] you just don’t see the way out,” Bradley says. “You can still survive. You can still get through it.”