Robinhood IRA Match Can’t Take the Place of a 401(k)

Everyone should have access to a quality retirement plan. That should not be a radical statement. People deserve to age with dignity and not worry about outliving their savings or paying for necessities like shelter and food.

Yet tens of millions of American workers don’t have access to pensions or 401(k) plans through work. That means they are on their own when it comes to planning and saving for their retirement years. While many depend on Social Security, the average $2,000 monthly payment is rarely enough to support a good quality of life.

Traditionally, having to self-manage a retirement plan has meant opening an Individual Retirement Account with a brokerage firm, at least for savvier and more affluent workers. But lately, investing apps such as Robinhood Markets Inc. and Acorns are offering an option usually found only in employer-based plans: a match on retirement contributions, typically up to 3% of the account holder’s investment. Even robo-advisers like Bettermentand SoFi Technologies Inc. have gotten into the IRA match game.

As an advocate for seeking out the best return and not staying loyal to the old guard, Robinhood’s IRA match offer initially piqued my interest. While it isn’t ideal that products marketed by investing apps might be a saver’s best option, it also isn’t optimal that the responsibility for building a healthy retirement portfolio is put on the shoulders of the average person who might have little experience with investing.