New Auto-IRA Program: How Residents in DE, ME, NJ, VT, and NV Can Enhance Their Retirement Savings

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Key Takeaways

  • Automatic individual retirement accounts or auto-IRAs automatically enroll workers without 401(k)s into retirement accounts funded by payroll deductions.
  • More than 20 states have passed or are considering laws to provide auto-IRAs.
  • For workers, auto-IRAs offer the simplicity of “set it and forget it” savings—removing the paperwork and guesswork that often keeps people from starting.

An auto-IRA is a state-run program that automatically enrolls eligible workers if their employer doesn’t offer a plan. Contributions are deducted directly from paychecks, usually starting at 3% to 5% of wages, and placed into investments like target-date funds or bonds.

For workers, this removes the friction of opening an account and deciding how much to save. Research shows people are more likely to build savings when they're enrolled automatically. With almost half of U.S. private-sector workers lacking access to a retirement plan, auto-IRAs are designed to close the massive gap.

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Five New States Jump In: What It Means for Workers

Delaware, Maine, New Jersey, and Vermont launched programs in 2024, with Nevada coming on board in mid-2025. By joining an interstate partnership begun by Colorado, these states were able to launch more quickly and avoid lengthy contracting processes.

The programs are already showing positive results. Maine, Delaware, and Vermont together enrolled more than 100,000 savers within their first year. That kind of early growth signals momentum, especially for small business employees who rarely get access to traditional 401(k)s.

Fast Fact

Many states are using partnerships to launch programs faster and at lower costs, such as Colorado’s “Partnership for a Dignified Retirement.”

How Auto-IRAs Can Accelerate Your Retirement

If you live in a state that offers an auto-IRA, you don’t need to do much to get started. Once your employer registers with the program, you’ll receive a notice—by mail or email—letting you know that you’re being automatically enrolled. Unless you actively opt out, a small percentage of your paycheck (usually from 3% to 5%) will begin going straight into a Roth IRA managed by the state.

From there, contributions are deducted each pay period, just like taxes or health insurance, and the money is invested in target date funds and other lower-risk investments. Some programs raise your contribution rate automatically each year to help you keep pace with inflation and your retirement needs.

For most of these programs, you can log in online at any time to increase or decrease your contribution, change investments, or opt out entirely. But the significant advantage is that you don’t have to make those choices to get started—the system does it for you.

For workers who have put off opening an IRA—or didn’t know where to start—auto-IRAs make the process almost effortless.

The Bottom Line

State auto-IRAs are expanding quickly, and five new states have recently made them available. For workers in Delaware, Maine, New Jersey, Vermont, and Nevada, this means an easier path to retirement security—without the paperwork or decision paralysis that keeps so many from saving.

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