For more stories like this, sign up for the PLANADVISERdash daily newsletter.
Auto-IRA Program Approved by Massachusetts Legislature
The FY 2026 budget bill includes the provision creating the Massachusetts Secure Choice program.
Massachusetts Secure Choice is one signature away from becoming a law. On June 30, the Massachusetts state legislature voted in favor of a measure that would establish an auto-individual retirement plan program for private sector employees in the state. The measure comes as part of the passage of H.4240, the state’s fiscal year 2026 appropriations bill.
The FY 2026 bill was adopted after several iterations passed through the chambers. The reconciled bill passed in the Senate by a 28-2 vote, and the House followed suit 139-6. Governor Maura Healey is expected to sign the bill.
Of the twenty states that have enacted programs requiring retirement plans to be available for private sector workers, Massachusetts will become the 18th to have an auto-IRA.
The new program will expand the Massachusetts Defined Contribution (CORE) Plan, a tax-deferred and post-tax 401(k) savings plan developed for employees of nonprofits with 20 or fewer employees, which was signed into law in 2012.
Sections 20 and 22 of the new legislation would amend state law to create the auto-IRA program. The amendments include establishing Massachusetts Secure Choice, creating the Massachusetts Secure Choice Savings Board and a payroll deposit mechanism that allows employees of organizations that do not provide a retirement plan to participate.
The board would consist of five members: the state treasurer or a designee, the comptroller or a designee, the secretary of the commonwealth or a designee, a public representative with expertise in retirement savings plan administration, investment, or both—to represent participating employees—and a public representative with expertise in retirement savings plan administration, investment or both—to represent participating employers.
Massachusetts Secure Choice will require employers with 25 or more employees that do not offer a retirement plan to either offer a plan or facilitate their employees’ enrollment into a state-run IRA.
Employees would be allowed to select their annual contribution level into the fund. The default contribution rate for those who did not choose would be 6% of their pay, with an annual escalation of 1% up to a maximum of 10% of their wages. For the 2025 tax year, the IRA contribution limit is $7,000 for those under age 50, and $8,000 for those age 50 and older.
Additionally, employees would be allowed to select an investment option from the options available. Those who did not select an investment option would default into a qualified default investment alternative chosen by the program.
Employees may also opt out of participation in the program.
Research from Georgetown University finds that 1.3 million Massachusetts private sector workers—43% of the state’s workforce—lack access to an employer-sponsored plan.
“This coverage gap represents more than statistics, it signals a looming economic challenge for the Commonwealth,” said Nathan Glassey, director of state and federal legislative affairs for the American Retirement Association, in a statement. “The Massachusetts Secure Choice Savings Program represents the most comprehensive and effective approach to closing this coverage gap.”
You Might Also Like:

Rhode Island To Start Auto-IRA Program in 2025

State 401(k) Mandates May Cause ‘Crowd-In’ Effect, Boosting Private Plans

Federal IRA Bill Proposed in House of Representatives
« Supreme Court Seeks Input from Solicitor General in 401(k) Fees Case