Question:
❓After a big medical bill, which move can hurt your retirement the most?
A) Put it on a credit card
B) Use an emergency fund
C) Stop retirement contributions for a while
D) Pull money from a 401(k) or IRA
Answer:
✅ D) Pull money from a 401(k) or IRA
Pulling money from a 401(k) or IRA does the most long-term damage—even when you avoid the penalty, you lose decades of growth.
There’s a little-known break here: you can take money from certain retirement accounts to cover unreimbursed medical expenses above 7.5% of your income and skip the 10% penalty. But you’ll still owe income tax, and that money stops growing for good. A $10,000 withdrawal in your 40s can mean $25,000–$30,000+ less by the time you retire.
Why the other moves hurt less:
A) Credit card—the interest stings, but you recover once it’s paid off.
B) Emergency fund—this is exactly what it’s for; far better than touching long-term money.
C) Pausing contributions—it slows you down for a while, but your existing savings keep growing.
Taking money out of retirement is the one hit you can’t easily recover from. Protecting that money is what a real retirement strategy is built around.


