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What America's Retirement Savings Gap Means for Werner Enterprises Employees

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A Retirement System That Has Shifted Responsibility

Over the past several decades, the structure of retirement in the United States has changed in a fundamental way. The defined benefit pension, which once covered roughly half of private-sector workers, now reaches only about 15 percent of the private-sector workforce. That shift moved the primary responsibility for retirement preparation off employers and onto individuals.

The problem is that most workers have not adjusted to that shift. Participation rates, savings rates, and average balances all point to a population that has not kept pace with what retirement now requires.

What the Numbers Show

Among private-sector workers, somewhere between 65 and 70 percent have access to an employer-sponsored retirement plan. Of those who have access, only about half actually participate. For workers in their 50s, the median 401(k) balance is roughly $85,000 to $95,000. For workers in their 60s, the median is similar.

GroupMedian 401(k) BalanceAnnual Income at 4% Withdrawal
Workers in their 50s~$85,000-$95,000~$3,400-$3,800/year
Workers in their 60s~$88,000-$90,000~$3,500-$3,600/year
Target for 30-year retirement$750,000-$1,500,000+$30,000-$60,000/year

Those are median figures, which means half the population has less. For most people, a balance in that range will not sustain a 20 or 30-year retirement, particularly once you account for healthcare costs and the compounding effects of inflation.

The downstream result is predictable: about 40 percent of current retirees depend on Social Security for more than half of their income. Between 15 and 20 percent depend on it for more than 90 percent of their income. Social Security was built to supplement retirement income, not replace it.

Where Werner Enterprises Employees Stand Differently

Werner Enterprises employees are generally in a better position than the national average. Most Werner Enterprises companies offer competitive 401(k) plans with employer matching contributions, access to deferred compensation programs, stock purchase plans, and financial wellness resources that most private-sector workers never see.

But access does not automatically translate into adequate preparation. Some Werner Enterprises employees do not contribute enough to capture the full employer match. Others have set a contribution rate and not revisited it as their income grew. Lifestyle inflation is real at every income level, and the assumption that there will be time to save more later shows up consistently in retirement planning conversations.

At The Retirement Group, what we see most often is not that Werner Enterprises employees made dramatic mistakes. It is that small gaps, an under-optimized contribution rate, an unreviewed asset allocation, a Roth conversion decision that was never made, compounded quietly over years before anyone addressed them.

The Risk That Gets Overlooked

The national retirement data also points to a risk that does not get enough attention in good markets: sequence of returns. A market downturn in the first few years of retirement can permanently reduce a portfolio's ability to sustain withdrawals, even if the market eventually recovers fully.

For Werner Enterprises employees accustomed to reliable income, the transition to portfolio-based withdrawals in retirement requires planning. A portfolio that looks sufficient in a strong market can look significantly different after an early-retirement correction.

This is why a withdrawal strategy needs to account for what happens in difficult conditions, not just what works in normal or favorable ones. At The Retirement Group, stress-testing a retirement income plan across a range of market scenarios is standard practice. The goal is a plan that holds together when conditions are difficult, not just when they are favorable.

Social Security and the Timing Decision

Even for Werner Enterprises employees with strong savings, Social Security is a meaningful piece of retirement income. Higher lifetime earnings produce higher benefits, but the decision of when to claim still matters considerably.

Claiming early reduces the monthly benefit permanently. Waiting until age 70 increases it significantly. For a married couple, the coordination of two Social Security claims adds another layer of planning. The right answer depends on health, other income sources, tax situation, and how long retirement might reasonably last.

This is not a decision to make by default. For most Werner Enterprises employees, Social Security claiming strategy is worth modeling carefully before making an irreversible choice.

What the National Picture Is Really Saying

The data on American retirement preparedness is not just a statistic about other people. It reflects what happens when individual savings behavior does not keep up with individual responsibility for retirement outcomes.

Werner Enterprises employees have more advantages going into retirement than most Americans do. Better plan access, higher matching contributions, often higher incomes. The gap between those advantages and a funded retirement is not always large, but it can widen if the advantages are not used deliberately.

The families who navigate retirement most successfully tend to share one thing: they started planning in earnest before they needed to. They closed gaps when the gaps were still small. They worked with an advisor to coordinate tax strategy, income timing, and estate planning as a single integrated problem, not a series of disconnected decisions.

That kind of planning is available to Werner Enterprises employees who choose to engage with it. The national retirement data is a useful reminder of why it matters.

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The national retirement data is not a picture of unavoidable outcomes. It reflects what happens when the shift from employer-funded to individually-funded retirement is not met with an equally serious shift in savings behavior. Werner Enterprises employees have the resources and the access to do better. The ones who use those advantages deliberately tend to build retirement security that most Americans cannot match.

Most American workers face a critical retirement savings gap: insufficient assets to replace pre-retirement income. Werner Enterprises helps close this gap through its employer retirement contributions. The 401(k) match (company match up to 5% of pay) represents a meaningful employer contribution, typically between 3% and 6% of salary annually. Over a 30-year career, this compounds significantly through tax-deferred growth.

Employees who maximize Werner Enterprises's retirement benefits—contributing enough to capture the full match and, when possible, maximizing employer non-elective or profit-sharing contributions—can accumulate retirement balances well above the national average. A worker earning $75,000 annually who saves 10% (employee + employer) over 30 years could accumulate over $1 million in today's dollars, assuming 5% real returns. This illustrates the power of starting early and maintaining consistent contributions. However, savings gaps often result from low employee contributions, job changes that interrupt employer matching, or taking loans from the 401(k). Staying engaged with Werner Enterprises's plan and maintaining contributions through job transitions maximizes the long-term value of the employer benefit.

What type of retirement plan does Werner Enterprises offer to its employees?

Werner Enterprises offers a 401(k) retirement savings plan to its employees.

How can employees of Werner Enterprises enroll in the 401(k) plan?

Employees can enroll in the Werner Enterprises 401(k) plan through the company’s HR portal or by contacting the HR department for assistance.

What is the company match for the 401(k) plan at Werner Enterprises?

Werner Enterprises provides a company match of 50% on employee contributions up to a certain percentage of their salary.

Are there any eligibility requirements to participate in the 401(k) plan at Werner Enterprises?

Yes, employees must meet specific eligibility requirements, such as completing a certain period of service, to participate in the Werner Enterprises 401(k) plan.

Can employees of Werner Enterprises change their contribution percentage to the 401(k) plan?

Yes, employees can change their contribution percentage at any time by accessing their account online or contacting HR at Werner Enterprises.

What investment options are available in the Werner Enterprises 401(k) plan?

The Werner Enterprises 401(k) plan offers a variety of investment options, including mutual funds, target-date funds, and other investment vehicles.

Does Werner Enterprises allow employees to take loans against their 401(k) savings?

Yes, Werner Enterprises allows employees to take loans against their 401(k) savings under certain conditions.

What happens to my 401(k) account if I leave Werner Enterprises?

If you leave Werner Enterprises, you can choose to roll over your 401(k) account to another retirement plan, cash it out, or leave it with Werner Enterprises.

Is there a vesting schedule for the company match in the Werner Enterprises 401(k) plan?

Yes, Werner Enterprises has a vesting schedule for the company match, which means employees must work for a certain number of years to fully own the matched funds.

How often can employees of Werner Enterprises review their 401(k) account statements?

Employees can review their 401(k) account statements quarterly through the online portal provided by Werner Enterprises.

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For more information you can reach the plan administrator for Werner Enterprises at , ; or by calling them at .

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