This Open Enrollment Season, Don’t Expect Workers to Review Retirement Savings

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Possibly attuned to browsing social media, only 44% of workers plan to review their retirement contributions during open enrollment season, finds a new survey by Corebridge Financial and Morning Consult.

The research, which fielded responses from 2,312 working adults, reports that while 87% of workers believe in revisiting their retirement savings plan while selecting workplace benefits, only 34% will review their employer’s contribution and just 31% plan to evaluate whether they’re on track to reach their retirement targets.

“The benefits available through the workplace can play a major role in retirement planning — from helping you accumulate and protect retirement savings to ensuring your loved ones are taken care of later in life,” said Terri Fiedler, president of Retirement Services at Corebridge Financial, in a statement. “Your employer’s open enrollment period is an opportune time to review your retirement plan holistically, identify gaps and needs, ensure you’re maximizing your employer’s contribution matching programs and take actions that will help achieve the retirement you envision.”

Many who do not intend to review or make changes to their retirement plan during open enrollment simply say it’s because they haven’t thought about it (27%). Corebridge says the finding exemplifies why employers and financial professionals should consistently educate and engage employees and clients on their retirement benefits.

As only 41% of respondents say that their retirement outlook has improved since this time last year, Corebridge notes a clear opportunity for workers to take action with their retirement savings during open enrollment, and one for retirement plan advisors to ensure their clients are understanding. These include:

This is especially true for women employees, notes Corebridge, as women were significantly less likely to say their retirement outlook has improved within the past year (33%).

Alternatively, Millennial workers were the most likely to say their outlook has improved, found Corebridge, with 51% adding that they “feel good about retirement.”

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