• Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest finance news and updates directly to your inbox.

Top News

Netflix’s ‘Thursday Murder Club’ Stars And Director On How Whodunit Differs From Other Mysteries

September 6, 2025

8 Groups Who Can Make Early Retirement Withdrawals Without Penalty

September 6, 2025

Legit Online Jobs and the Best Places to Find Them

September 6, 2025
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Trending
  • Netflix’s ‘Thursday Murder Club’ Stars And Director On How Whodunit Differs From Other Mysteries
  • 8 Groups Who Can Make Early Retirement Withdrawals Without Penalty
  • Legit Online Jobs and the Best Places to Find Them
  • Powerball Jackpot: Which States Don’t Tax the Lottery?
  • Smart Tax Moves If You Have Multiple Income Streams
  • Google Report: This Is How Leaders Are Using AI at Work
  • This ChatGPT Agent Predicted a Viral Trend in 15 Minutes — Then My Content Took Off
  • Mortgage rates tumble to lowest level since October 2024
Saturday, September 6
Facebook Twitter Instagram
Indenta
Subscribe For Alerts
  • Home
  • News
  • Personal Finance
    • Savings
    • Banking
    • Mortgage
    • Retirement
    • Taxes
    • Wealth
  • Make Money
  • Budgeting
  • Burrow
  • Investing
  • Credit Cards
  • Loans
Indenta
Home » The False Promise Of Retirement Target-Date Mutual Funds
Retirement

The False Promise Of Retirement Target-Date Mutual Funds

News RoomBy News RoomJune 24, 20250 Views0
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email Tumblr Telegram

If you’re contributing to a 401(k), chances are you’ve been default invested into a retirement target-date mutual fund—and you may not even know what that means.

These funds are often the default investment option in employer-sponsored retirement plans. They sound reassuring, with names like “Retirement 2045 Fund,” suggesting that someone has tailored a plan just for your future. But here’s the reality: that comfort may be misleading. These funds aren’t built for you. They’re built for everyone.

What Retirement Target-Date Funds Promise—And What They Don’t Deliver

Target-date mutual funds (TDFs) simplify investing by automatically adjusting your asset allocation over time. As you get closer to the fund’s “target” year, the mix of stocks and bonds shifts to become more conservative. The idea is to reduce risk as retirement nears.

But the problem is this: Target-date funds make assumptions that are unknown to anyone besides their portfolio manager. And chances are, the assumptions are not a perfect fit for you.

Do these funds ask how much you’ve already saved? Whether you’re married? If you’ll have a pension? Or what kind of legacy you want to leave? Aren’t those important factors that should be considered for you?

What is the expected rate of return of the Target date mutual fund? That is not expected to be a constant. Those in the industry know that there are a range of returns depending on volatility and the amount of risk being taken. You may get the negative range early and the higher end later. Also depending on when you start saving you may have missed the higher returns that would have compounded your dollars more.

The 401(k) Isn’t a Retirement Plan—It’s a Savings Vehicle

A 401(k) is a tax-advantaged savings account. The tax advantage has to do with deferral of the taxes on what you earn. Regarding your initial savings or contribution, you can decide if you want to have that taxed today, known as Roth, or not have it taxed and then pay taxes when you withdraw the money in the future. Outside of tax advantaged retirement accounts, your savings is subject to short and long-term capital gains.

It is not, by itself, a plan for retirement. Things like defined benefit pensions and Social Security have some actuarial assumptions. In the case of 401(k) and 403(b) plans, you decide whether to contribute to a traditional or Roth account. You decide how much to save. And you determine whether to accept the default investment or actively select your own. Will your assumptions and actions be sufficient?

For 2025, the IRS allows employees to contribute up to $23,000 to their 401(k) if they’re over 50 (or $19,500 if younger), source: IRS.gov. But just saving to the cap doesn’t guarantee success. That’s because the cap has nothing to do with what you actually need to retire comfortably. Neither does, saving to get the maximum match from your employer, if they offer a match.

The Missing Retirement Target-Date Mutual Fund Instructions

While you may have access to a 401(k) plan at work, it doesn’t come with instructions on Your employer may suggest contributing 3% of your income by defaulting your contribution to that percentage. Your company might offer a match. That’s a good start—but not a finish line. And if you’re defaulted into a TDF, you’re likely assuming it will get you to retirement. Unfortunately, it probably won’t.

Target-date funds don’t account for:

  • How much income you’ll want in retirement
  • Whether you’re married or single
  • Social Security timing strategies
  • Pension eligibility
  • Existing savings and future contributions
  • Whether you’re using traditional or Roth savings
  • Your desire to do Roth conversions
  • Your risk need vs. risk preference
  • Longevity in your family

These are questions a thoughtful retirement income plan should answer. A target-date fund simply doesn’t ask.

Instead of picking a fund based on a future date, start with your desired outcome.

Ask yourself:

  • When do I want to retire?
  • How much annual income will I need to feel secure and fulfilled?
  • What income sources will I have—Social Security, pension, rental income?
  • What’s my expected lifespan?
  • What will healthcare and long-term care cost?
  • Will I support others—children, grandchildren, aging parents?

Then, work backward. Factor in what you’ve already saved, where it’s saved (pre-tax, Roth, brokerage), and how much you plan to continue contributing. Your strategy should account for sequence of returns risk, tax diversification, and your personal glidepath.

Real-World Comparison

Consider two savers:

Age Income Accumulated Savings Time to Retirement

35 $80,000 $0 30 years

35 $160,000 $150,000 30 years

Should they both be saving the same amount if they were say trying to replace 70% of their current income throughout their retirement, inflation-adjusted? Much less would the same retirement target mutual fund get them there?

Under the Hood: What You Don’t See in a Retirement TDF

Every TDF family—Fidelity, Vanguard, T. Rowe Price—uses a different “glidepath,” the formula that shifts the portfolio over time. Some use index funds. Others use actively managed strategies. Some de-risk more quickly; others stay aggressive into retirement.

That means two investors with the same retirement year could be taking different risk levels depending on their fund family. And unless you dig into the details, you’d never know.

A 2024 analysis from Morningstar found that the equity allocation of 2025 target-date funds ranged from as low as 25% to as high as 60% source: Morningstar. That’s a massive difference in risk for people on the brink of retirement.

Final Thoughts on Retirement TDFs

If you want to retire with peace of mind—and stay retired with confidence—you deserve more than a plug-and-play investment. Talk to a designated retirement professional such as a Certified Financial Planner™ (CFP®), Retirement Income Certified Professional® (RICP), or Chartered Retirement Planning Counselor® (CRPC®). They can help you turn your savings into a sustainable, tax-efficient, and personally meaningful retirement.

Retirement target-date mutual funds offer a helpful starting point. But they are no substitute for a personalized plan. They promise simplicity—but at the cost of precision.

:

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Articles

Netflix’s ‘Thursday Murder Club’ Stars And Director On How Whodunit Differs From Other Mysteries

Retirement September 6, 2025

Labor Day 2025: Who Owns The Economy?

Retirement September 5, 2025

Balancing Risk, Reward, And Responsibility

Retirement September 4, 2025

Key To Preventing Big Medicare Advantage Mistakes

Retirement September 3, 2025

Retirement Planning In 2025: What’s On People’s Minds

Retirement September 2, 2025

A Hidden Risk In Money, Work, And Life

Retirement September 1, 2025
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Top News

8 Groups Who Can Make Early Retirement Withdrawals Without Penalty

September 6, 20250 Views

Legit Online Jobs and the Best Places to Find Them

September 6, 20250 Views

Powerball Jackpot: Which States Don’t Tax the Lottery?

September 6, 20250 Views

Smart Tax Moves If You Have Multiple Income Streams

September 6, 20250 Views
Don't Miss

Google Report: This Is How Leaders Are Using AI at Work

By News RoomSeptember 6, 2025

AI is making a mark in marketing, security, and customer experience, according to a new…

This ChatGPT Agent Predicted a Viral Trend in 15 Minutes — Then My Content Took Off

September 6, 2025

Mortgage rates tumble to lowest level since October 2024

September 5, 2025

Labor Day 2025: Who Owns The Economy?

September 5, 2025
About Us

Your number 1 source for the latest finance, making money, saving money and budgeting. follow us now to get the news that matters to you.

We're accepting new partnerships right now.

Email Us: [email protected]

Our Picks

Netflix’s ‘Thursday Murder Club’ Stars And Director On How Whodunit Differs From Other Mysteries

September 6, 2025

8 Groups Who Can Make Early Retirement Withdrawals Without Penalty

September 6, 2025

Legit Online Jobs and the Best Places to Find Them

September 6, 2025
Most Popular

This Leadership Practice Keeps Teams Moving Amid Uncertainty

September 3, 20252 Views

Netflix’s ‘Thursday Murder Club’ Stars And Director On How Whodunit Differs From Other Mysteries

September 6, 20250 Views

8 Groups Who Can Make Early Retirement Withdrawals Without Penalty

September 6, 20250 Views
Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest Dribbble
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Press Release
  • Advertise
  • Contact
© 2025 Inodebta. All Rights Reserved.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.