How to Find a Lost 401(k) From an Old Job
Americans have left behind over 29 million retirement accounts worth more than $1.65 trillion. If you've changed jobs in the last 10 years, there's a real chance you have money sitting in an old 401(k) that you've forgotten about. Here's exactly how to find it.
Why do people lose track of 401(k) accounts?
It happens more often than you'd think. According to a 2025 study by Capitalize, there are now over 29 million forgotten 401(k) accounts in the United States. The average balance of these accounts is around $55,000 — though most people with forgotten accounts have smaller balances in the $1,000 to $15,000 range.
The most common reasons:
- You changed jobs and didn't roll over your old 401(k) to your new employer or an IRA. This is by far the #1 reason.
- Your old company was acquired, merged, or shut down. The plan still exists somewhere, but you may not know who manages it now.
- You moved and your old plan administrator lost contact with you. Statements went to an old address and eventually stopped.
- Small balances were automatically cashed out. If your balance was under $5,000 when you left, your employer may have rolled it into a "safe harbor" IRA or sent you a check you never cashed.
5 ways to find your lost 401(k)
Work through these methods in order. Most people find their accounts using the first two.
Visit unclaimedretirementbenefits.com and enter your Social Security number. This free database was created specifically to reunite people with lost retirement accounts. It searches across thousands of plan administrators nationwide. Results are instant.
The DOL maintains a database of abandoned retirement plans at askebsa.dol.gov. If your former employer shut down their 401(k) plan, it may appear here. Search by company name. You can also call the Employee Benefits Security Administration at 1-866-444-3272.
This sounds obvious, but it works. Call or email your former employer's HR or benefits department and ask: "Do I still have a 401(k) account with your plan?" They're legally required to help you. Have your approximate employment dates ready. If the company was acquired, try the acquiring company's HR instead.
Every 401(k) plan files a Form 5500 with the DOL annually. Search at efast.dol.gov using your old employer's name. The filing will show you the plan administrator's name and contact information — the person who actually knows where your money is. This is especially useful if your old company has closed.
If you remember which company managed your 401(k) — Fidelity, Vanguard, Schwab, T. Rowe Price, Empower, Principal — contact them directly. Many have online tools where you can search by SSN. Even if you don't remember the provider, it's worth checking the big ones since they manage the majority of 401(k) plans.
What to do once you find your old 401(k)
Once you locate your account, you have three options:
Option 1: Roll it into your current employer's 401(k)
This consolidates everything in one place. Contact your current employer's plan administrator and ask for a "direct rollover." The money moves directly between accounts with no tax consequences. This is the simplest option if you like your current plan's investment options.
Option 2: Roll it into an IRA
Open a traditional IRA at any brokerage (Fidelity, Schwab, and Vanguard are popular choices with no account fees) and request a direct rollover. This gives you the most investment flexibility — you can invest in individual stocks, ETFs, bonds, or whatever you want. No taxes if done correctly as a direct rollover.
Option 3: Leave it where it is
If the plan has good investment options and low fees, you can leave the money where it is. However, you'll need to track another account, and some plans charge higher fees for former employees. Generally, rolling over is the better move.
Don't stop at your 401(k)
Forgotten retirement accounts are just the tip of the iceberg. There's over $80 billion in unclaimed money sitting in the US right now, including:
- HSA accounts from old employers (average: $1,400)
- Pension benefits — search the PBGC database (80,000+ unclaimed)
- Life insurance policies — search through the NAIC Policy Locator ($7.4B unclaimed)
- State unclaimed property — old bank accounts, security deposits, uncashed checks (1 in 4 Americans are owed money)
- Savings bonds — $28 billion in matured, unredeemed bonds
- Class action settlements — you may be owed money from lawsuits you didn't know about
Search all 8 databases in one place
Clovest's Lost Money Hub searches every major database for unclaimed money — 401(k)s, HSAs, pensions, unclaimed property, and more. Join the waitlist to be the first to try it.
Join the Clovest waitlistFrequently asked questions
The bottom line
Millions of Americans have money sitting in old 401(k) accounts they've completely forgotten about. The search takes 10 minutes and costs nothing. Even if you find just $1,000, that's $1,000 you didn't have this morning — and potentially tens of thousands more by the time you retire.
Start with the National Registry, check the DOL database, and call your old employer. You might be surprised what you find.