Financial advisors warn against using 401(k) funds for home down payments

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Financial advisors have long warned that borrowing from a 401(k) to fund a home down payment can solve one money problem by creating a bigger one later. The move can look sensible when buyers are scrambling to assemble cash in an expensive housing market, especially if a retirement plan loan seems cheaper or easier than other borrowing options. But the appeal often fades once the trade-offs are laid out in full. The issue is not that 401(k) loans are forbidden. Federal rules allow them in many plans, and some workers do use them to bridge the gap to homeownership. The concern, advisers say, is that buyers often focus on getting into the house and underestimate what they are giving up in future retirement growth, as well as what can happen if their job situation changes before the loan is fully repaid.
401(k) home down payment reality check
$50,000
Maximum typical loan cap under federal rules, or 50% of vested balance, whichever is less
5 years
Standard repayment window, with longer terms allowed for a principal-residence purchase in some plans
Optional
Plans may offer loans, but they are not required to
10%
Possible early-withdrawal penalty if a failed loan becomes a taxable distribution before age 59½
Source framework based on IRS and Department of Labor guidance.

How 401(k) Loans Actually Work

On paper, the rules are simple enough. The IRS says most participants can borrow up to the lesser of $50,000 or 50% of their vested account balance. In general, the loan must be repaid in substantially level payments made at least quarterly, and the standard repayment period is five years. There is an exception that makes the strategy attractive to would-be buyers: if the loan is used to purchase a principal residence, repayment can extend beyond five years under federal rules. That sounds like flexibility, and in one sense it is. But it also means the borrowed money can sit outside the market for a much longer stretch, which is where the real cost begins to build. Another important detail is that access is not guaranteed. The Department of Labor notes that 401(k) plans are permitted to offer loans, but they are not required to. In other words, two workers with similar balances and similar incomes may have very different options simply because their employers wrote different plan rules.

The Bigger Risk Is the Growth That Never Happens

What makes 401(k) borrowing deceptively easy to sell is that borrowers pay interest back to themselves. That line is technically true, but financial advisors often say it distracts from the part that matters most. Once money is taken out of a retirement account, it is no longer invested alongside the rest of the portfolio. Any market gains that would have happened on those dollars during the loan period are lost. The Government Accountability Office has long warned that retirement-plan leakage, including loans that interrupt compounding or are not repaid, can erode long-term savings. The IRS makes a similar point more directly in its participant guidance, cautioning that borrowing from a 401(k) can reduce account earnings and leave less money available in retirement. That trade-off can be especially painful when buyers are borrowing for a large down payment. A household may feel proud of getting into a home, but if tens of thousands of dollars spend years outside a tax-advantaged retirement account, the long-run hit can be significant. Home equity may grow over time, but so can maintenance costs, insurance bills, property taxes, and interest expense. The result is not always the wealth-building shortcut buyers imagine.

Why Job Loss Is the Scenario Advisers Worry About Most

The cleanest version of a 401(k) loan assumes one thing above all: the borrower keeps the same job and keeps repaying on schedule. That is why advisers tend to focus less on the monthly payment and more on what happens if employment changes midstream. The IRS warns that some plans may require repayment in full when a worker leaves a job. If that does not happen, the unpaid balance can become a plan loan offset or deemed distribution, creating a taxable event. For borrowers younger than 59½, that can also mean the additional 10% early-distribution tax unless an exception applies. There is some relief built into the rules, but it is narrower than many workers assume. The IRS says missed installment payments can trigger a default unless the plan allows a limited cure period, generally ending by the last day of the calendar quarter following the quarter in which the payment was due. And while certain qualified plan loan offsets can have a longer rollover window tied to the tax return due date, including extensions, that does not eliminate the cash problem. The borrower still needs money from somewhere else to complete that rollover and avoid taxation.

Housing Pressure Makes the Temptation Stronger

Image by Freepik
Image by Freepik
There is a reason this question keeps coming up. Saving for a down payment remains difficult even as affordability has improved somewhat from recent lows. The National Association of Realtors reported that its Housing Affordability Index has been climbing in recent months, but the typical existing-home price was still about $398,000 in February 2026. Meanwhile, the Federal Housing Finance Agency said U.S. house prices were still higher year over year late in 2025. For buyers trying to compete with limited cash, a retirement account can look like the one pool of money large enough to matter. But federal homebuying guidance from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau stresses that buyers need to account not just for the down payment, but also closing costs and the cash needed after moving in. Using a 401(k) to scrape together upfront funds can leave households with too little cushion once the purchase is complete.

Why Many Advisors Still Say No

This is where the headline earns its weight. Financial advisors are not warning against 401(k) down-payment loans because the rules forbid them. They are warning against them because the math can turn against the borrower in several ways at once: retirement growth is interrupted, repayment becomes another monthly obligation, and a job change can transform a manageable loan into a tax headache. That does not mean the move is always wrong. A buyer with unusually stable employment, substantial cash reserves beyond the retirement account, and a disciplined repayment plan may decide the trade-off makes sense. But that is a narrower group than many buyers assume. In most cases, advisors say the safer path is to keep retirement savings intact and look for other ways to reach a purchase, whether that means a smaller target price, a longer savings runway, or a loan program with a lower required down payment. Federal law makes 401(k) borrowing possible. That is not the same thing as making it prudent. For workers thinking about using retirement money to get a foot in the housing market, that difference can shape both their next home purchase and the size of their nest egg decades from now.