The Resourceful Club — Issue #005

THE RESOURCEFUL CLUB  ·  Issue #005  ·  Week of May 30, 2026  ·  View in browser

Career · AI · Money

The Resourceful Club

Figure it out. Before everyone else does.

Est. 2026 · Issue 005 · ~7 min read
Sponsor Sponsor name here — Sponsor copy here. CTA →

Hey {{first_name | default: 'friend'}} —

Some companies paused or reduced their 401(k) match in 2026 — a quiet cut worth 3–6% of your salary that most people won’t catch until it’s already cost them thousands.

This week: the 10-minute audit, a prompt that builds your recovery plan from scratch, and the retirement stat that looks fine on the surface until you read it sideways.

01 The Take  

Your Employer May Have Cut Your Pay. You Probably Don’t Know Yet.

Companies are pausing 401(k) matches without announcements, without emails, and without any legal requirement to tell you. The people who notice are the ones already paying attention. Most people aren’t.

A few years ago I noticed my pay was slightly lower than it should have been. Not dramatically — just enough to make me look twice. After digging through my statements I found it: a fee change that had quietly reduced my take-home. No announcement, no email. It had just changed. That experience taught me something: the financial system is not designed to alert you when something works against you. It’s designed to keep you from noticing.

Most people treat their retirement account the same way they treat their internet bill — set it up once, assume it’s fine, never look again. The problem is that companies know this. A paused 401(k) match is the perfect quiet cut because the people who benefit from you not noticing are counting on exactly that.

A friend checked his pay stub in March. Not because anything seemed off — he just checks every month, which already puts him in a different category from most people. His net was down slightly. After some digging, he found it: his company had paused the 401(k) match in January. Four months, no announcement, no email. Just a line item that quietly stopped appearing.

The match was 4% of his $85,000 salary. That’s $3,400 a year — and he’d already missed $1,133 he’s not getting back.

Here’s the thing about 401(k) matches: companies aren’t legally required to announce when they pause one. They update the plan documents, adjust a policy page nobody reads, and move on. The employees who notice are the ones already paying close attention. Everyone else finds out during a benefits review — or never.

 

“You’re not out $3,400. You’re out closer to $18,000. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a car.”

The real cost isn’t the missed year. It’s the compounding. A 4% match paused for one year, at 7% average annual return, over 25 years — you’re not out $3,400. You’re out closer to $18,000. That’s not a rounding error. That’s a car.

So why doesn’t everyone just check? Because retirement accounts are designed to be set-and-forget. You enrolled, picked a contribution percentage, and moved on. The system rewards inertia. And companies looking for a quiet cost cut know exactly that.

The audit takes ten minutes. Log into your 401(k) portal, pull up your transaction history for the last six months, and look for employer contributions. If there are none — or if the amounts dropped — you have your answer. Then call HR and ask directly: is the match still active, and when was it last changed?

That phone call is the one most people never make.

The takeaway

Log into your 401(k) portal today. Pull up the last six months of employer contributions. If they stopped — or dropped — you have a 10-minute audit to run and one phone call to make.

 
02 The AI Cheat Code  

This week’s implementation

The 401(k) Audit Prompt That Does the Math For You

Most people find out their match was paused by accident. This prompt turns your retirement data into a plain-English audit — calculates what the pause is costing you, suggests where to redirect the money, and writes the HR script you’ll actually use.

Copy this prompt

I want to audit my 401(k) situation and build a simple action plan. Here’s my information:

- My current salary: [$SALARY]
- My employer’s stated 401(k) match: [e.g., “4% match on first 4% I contribute”]
- My current contribution percentage: [%]
- Whether my employer match is currently active: [yes / no / I’m not sure]
- My current 401(k) balance: [$BALANCE]
- My age: [AGE]
- My target retirement age: [AGE]

Please do the following:
1. Calculate how much my employer match is worth annually, and what a 1-year pause costs me over 25 years at 7% average annual return
2. If the match is paused or reduced, suggest 2-3 alternative places to redirect those dollars (Roth IRA, taxable brokerage, HSA if eligible)
3. Write a short, direct script I can use when calling HR to ask about the match status
4. Flag any obvious gaps in my retirement strategy based on my age and target

Keep the output plain and practical. Numbers, not platitudes. No jargon.

Save the HR script before you close the chat — it’s easier to read from a script than to improvise on a call you’ve been putting off.

 
03 Career Intel  

6% of workers took a hardship 401(k) withdrawal in 2025 — up from 4.8% in 2024.

Vanguard / Fidelity How America Saves, 2026 — Average balances hit records: $146,400 (Fidelity), $167,970 (Vanguard).

The headline number is the record average balance, and it looks reassuring until you notice what’s underneath it. The people taking hardship withdrawals aren’t the ones with six-figure accounts. The average is climbing while the bottom of the distribution gets worse. If your balance looks fine right now, that’s not a reason to stop paying attention. It’s a reason to audit before the number changes.

 
04 Money Move  

This week’s contrarian take

Don’t Cut Your 401(k) Contribution Just Because the Match Is Gone

Here’s the move most people make when they find out their 401(k) match is paused: they reduce their own contribution. The logic sounds reasonable — if my employer isn’t matching, why lock up my money?

That logic is wrong.

Your pre-tax 401(k) contribution still reduces your taxable income whether the match is active or not. On a $90,000 salary, contributing 6% saves you roughly $1,350 in federal taxes (at the 22% bracket). That’s not a match, but it’s not nothing. The match amplified the return. Without it, the contribution still makes sense.

The smarter move: keep contributing to your 401(k) up to the IRS limit ($23,500 in 2026 if you’re under 50), then redirect additional savings to a Roth IRA ($7,000 limit). You get tax-deferred growth in the 401(k) and tax-free growth in the Roth. If the match comes back, you’re already ahead. If it doesn’t, you’ve been building on two tracks instead of waiting on one.

✦ AI assist: I used Claude to stress-test this argument. It confirmed the tax math holds at standard brackets and flagged that an HSA offers a third tax-advantaged track for those on eligible high-deductible plans. As always, this is analysis, not financial advice.

 
05 The Stack  
1

Read

Some Companies Are Pausing 401(k) Matches — Kiplinger

Source behind this week’s main story. No paywall, reads clean. Worth the five minutes if you want the full picture before you call HR.

2

Tool

Compound Interest Calculator — Investor.gov (SEC)

Not pretty, but it’s the SEC’s free tool. Plug in your match amount and let it show you what a one-year pause actually costs over 20 years. The number will annoy you.

3

Read

Previewing How America Saves 2026 — Vanguard

Vanguard’s full 2026 retirement data. Skip to the hardship withdrawal section. The headline average is real. What it hides is more interesting.

 

The Resourceful Club

Written weekly for people who want to stay ahead.
Reply to this email — it goes directly to me.

Unsubscribe  ·  Manage preferences  ·  View in browser

© 2026 The Resourceful Club. All rights reserved.

Keep Reading