Pool of assets set aside to support retirement income, whether through employer plans, pensions, or other long-term retirement savings structures.
A retirement fund is a pool of assets reserved to support income after a worker stops earning regular employment income.
The term is broad. It can describe employer-sponsored plans, pension pools, and other long-horizon savings structures built to turn contributions made during working years into retirement income later on.
Retirement funds matter because they connect three different decisions:
how much is saved during working years
how those savings are invested over time
how retirement income will eventually be produced
That makes the concept bigger than any one account. A retirement fund is really about the structure behind long-term retirement readiness.
Retirement funding often appears through:
employer-sponsored defined contribution plans
defined benefit pension structures
individual retirement accounts
professionally managed investment pools built around retirement obligations
Each structure handles contributions, investment risk, and payout design differently.
401(k) Plan: Major U.S. employer-sponsored retirement structure.
IRA: Common individual retirement vehicle in the U.S.
Defined Benefit Plan: Retirement design built around a promised payout formula.
Defined Contribution Plan: Retirement design where contributions are fixed but the ending value depends on investment results.