Infinite Wealth Builder

The 401K Trap

Why Your Retirement Account is a Tax Time Bomb

For 40 years, you've been told: 'Max out your 401K.' Here's what they forgot to mention: Your 401K isn't a retirement plan. It's a tax deferral plan. And with $34 trillion in national debt, where do you think tax rates are headed?

$34T+
National Debt
73
RMD Age
24%→37%
Tax Bracket Risk
$400K+
Hidden Fee Impact

You're Not Avoiding Taxes—You're Postponing Them

The Tax Time Bomb

When you contribute to a 401K, you're not saving on taxes. You're creating a deferred tax liability that grows with your account.

You saved $4,800 today to eventually pay $24,000+. And that assumes tax rates stay the same. With $34 trillion in debt, Social Security facing insolvency, and Medicare on life support—anyone who thinks rates are going DOWN is ignoring basic math.

Historical Top Tax Rates

94%
1944
70%
1981
37%
Today

We're at historically LOW rates. Your "tax savings" today could become a tax disaster tomorrow.

Today25 Years Later
Contribute $20,000Grows to $100,000
"Save" $4,800 at 24% bracketOwe $24,000+ in taxes
Feel good about "tax savings"Reality: 5x higher tax bill

Wall Street Takes Their Cut Whether Your Account Goes Up OR Down

Hidden Fees Eating Your Returns

Fee TypeTypical RangeImpact on $500K over 20 years
Management fees0.5-1.0%$50,000-$100,000
Fund expense ratios0.5-1.5%$50,000-$150,000
Administrative fees0.1-0.5%$10,000-$50,000
12b-1 marketing fees0.0-1.0%$0-$100,000
Total potential loss1.1-4.0%$110,000-$400,000

A 2% fee doesn't sound like much until you realize it can consume 30-40% of your potential returns over a working lifetime.

The IRS Controls Your Money—Not You

Required Minimum Distributions

Starting at age 73, the IRS forces you to withdraw money from your 401K—whether you need it or not.

Forces you to take income you may not need
Pushes you into higher tax brackets
Can trigger Social Security taxation
Creates Medicare IRMAA surcharges
Reduces your control over your own money

You've been told your 401K is "your money." But the IRS has a mandatory withdrawal schedule that proves otherwise.

If You Have $1 Million, You Don't Actually Have $1 Million

The Silent Partner in Your 401K

At Current Tax Rates

24% bracket$760,000
32% bracket$680,000
35% bracket$650,000

If Rates Rise to Historical Averages

40% bracket$600,000
50% bracket$500,000

You've been celebrating your 401K balance without accounting for the government's share.

High Earners Face the Greatest Risk

Who Gets Hurt Most by the 401K Trap?

✈️

Airline Pilots ($250K-$400K)

You're in high tax brackets NOW, and your defined benefit pension will push you even higher in retirement. Every dollar in your 401K will be taxed at your marginal rate—likely 32-35% or higher.

Section 7702: Tax-FREE, Not Tax-Deferred

What's the Alternative?

The good news: alternatives exist. They've been in the tax code since 1984.

Pay taxes once at today's known, historically low rates
Grow your money tax-free (no annual 1099s)
Access your wealth tax-free (no income tax on withdrawals)
Transfer to heirs tax-free (no estate tax on death benefit)
No RMDs forcing you to withdraw
MN

The Contrarian View

Matt Nye, Founder

"I've been in financial services for 20 years. The single biggest lie I've seen destroy retirement plans is 'just max out your 401K.'

It's not that 401Ks are evil. The employer match is real. But the idea that tax deferral is always beneficial ignores basic math about where tax rates are headed.

With $34 trillion in debt, Social Security facing insolvency, and Medicare on life support, anyone who thinks taxes are going DOWN is in denial. Your 401K balance is the ATM politicians will raid.

Get the employer match. But if that's your ONLY strategy, you're setting yourself up for a tax reckoning."

Frequently Asked Questions

Not necessarily. If you have an employer match, get it—that's free money. But consider whether maxing out beyond the match is the best use of your after-tax dollars.
Better than traditional 401Ks for tax treatment, but still subject to RMDs (inherited accounts), limited investment options, and no downside protection.
No. Strategic Roth conversions, Section 7702 strategies, and proper tax planning can help minimize the damage, even close to retirement.
Schedule a complimentary strategy session to review your specific situation and explore options.

Calculate Your 401K Tax Exposure

How much of your 401K actually belongs to you vs. the IRS? In a complimentary 30-minute session, we'll calculate your actual 401K tax exposure, review alternative strategies for your situation, and create an action plan.