Can I use my 401(k) as an ATM? New rules allow emergency withdrawals.

Need $1,000 to cover an unexpected expense? Starting this year, you may be able to withdraw the money from your 401(k) with relative ease.

New rules make it easier to tap your retirement account for emergency funds. In 2024, you can cash out as much as $1,000 from a traditional 401(k) or IRA to cover an urgent need. And here’s a big change: You get to define what counts as an emergency.

More Americans are raiding retirement accounts for emergency cash. The share of savers making hardship withdrawals from retirement plans has doubled in three years, from 1.7% in 2020 to 3.6% in 2023, according to a Vanguard analysis of its plans.

Traditional tax-sheltered retirement accounts are designed to reward those who save for retirement and penalize those who withdraw the money early. You generally contribute pretax dollars to the account and pay the tax when you take the money out.

Early withdrawal, typically before age 59 ½, triggers an additional tax equal to 10% of the sum. If you are paying a 15% tax rate and make an early withdrawal, you effectively lose 25% of the money before you spend a dime.

There have long been exceptions to that rule. They include higher education expenses, birth or adoption, a first-time home purchase, and the death or permanent disability of the account owner. In such cases, you can generally withdraw retirement funds and pay only ordinary income tax.

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Starting small is better than not starting a 401(k) at all.
Starting small is better than not starting a 401(k) at all.

New rules allow 'emergency' IRA withdrawals, you define the emergency

The rules changed this year, courtesy of the 2022 legislation known as Secure 2.0. Now, you can withdraw up to $1,000 to cover an emergency personal expense, a scenario defined as “meeting unforeseeable or immediate financial needs relating to necessary personal or family emergency expenses.”

The new language is pretty broad, covering not just specific categories, but also “any other necessary emergency personal expenses.”

Consider the range of expenses that a reasonable person might deem an unforeseeable or immediate emergency: Car repairs. Delinquent utility bills. Urgent dental needs. A roof leak. A parking ticket. Putting dinner on the table.

Congress tailored the law to make such withdrawals simpler and faster, retirement experts say, on the theory that Americans should be able to tap their retirement accounts for an urgent need.

“The ability to draw money out of a 401(k) for any type of financial emergency, it can help make 401(k) plans a little bit more attractive,” said Jeff Clark, head of defined contribution research at Vanguard.