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You look at your 401(k) statement and see a solid balance, just sitting there. Then you look at your credit card bill and see the 20-plus percent interest adding up … and up. You might be tempted to think: Why not use some of those savings to wipe the debt slate clean?
It’s a question millions of older Americans face. According to a March 2025 AARP survey, 52 percent of adults ages 50 to 64 and 42 percent of those 65 to 74 carry a credit card balance from month to month. More than a quarter of these older adults owe $10,000 or more, driven by everyday expenses, health care costs and credit card interest rates averaging 21 percent as of late 2025, according to Federal Reserve data.
No wonder paying down debt, particularly credit card bills, is Americans’ No. 1 financial goal for 2026, a December 2025 survey by the National Endowment for Financial Education found.
“Don’t touch your retirement savings until you retire” is a common refrain among financial pros, and it generally makes sense — that’s what your nest egg is for. But if you’re over 50 and grappling with high-interest debt, tapping retirement funds can be a way to dig yourself out, depending on how you do it. Here’s a realistic look at the pros and cons.
The case against tapping retirement funds
Let’s start with the position that most financial experts hold: In most circumstances, dipping into retirement savings to eliminate credit card debt is a bad idea. Here are the key reasons why.
The tax hit: Marc Russell, founder of the financial education platform BetterWallet, lays out the math bluntly. “When you withdraw from a 401(k) before age 59½, you may owe ordinary income taxes plus a 10 percent penalty, meaning you could lose 25 to 35 percent of what you take out,” he says.
Translation: A $20,000 withdrawal might net you only $12,000 to $14,000 after taxes and penalties.
The lost compound growth: “At 50-plus, tapping retirement isn’t just ‘using savings,’ ” says Kiersten Saunders, a personal finance writer and coauthor of Cashing Out: Win the Wealth Game by Walking Away. “It’s pulling money out of the market when you have the fewest years left to let it compound.”
At a 7 percent average annual return, $20,000 left invested for 10 years grows to more than $39,000. Over 15 years, that jumps to roughly $55,000. But once you withdraw it, those years of growth are gone for good.
Saundra Davis, founder of Sage Financial Solutions, a national nonprofit that trains financial coaches, puts it this way: “Using retirement funds to pay consumer debt is a permanent loss for a temporary problem.”
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