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Where to Watch Every Australia Match Free on SBS

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Justin Bieber and Hailey Cheer U.S. to 4-1 World Cup

Australian football fans can watch every single Socceroos match at the 2026 FIFA World Cup completely free of charge, with the entire tournament — all 104 matches across the United States, Canada, and Mexico — airing live without a subscription through the national broadcaster SBS.

The FIFA World Cup 2026 kicked off on June 12 in Australian Eastern Standard Time, with the tournament opener between Mexico and South Africa kicking off at 5 a.m. AEST, and was broadcast as an exclusive event on SBS in Australia. All 104 matches from host nations the United States, Canada, and Mexico are being shown live and free, with matches also shown live on SBS Viceland.

Free Coverage Across Every Platform

The breadth of SBS’s coverage extends well beyond simply televising matches on its main free-to-air channel. All 104 matches of the FIFA World Cup 2026 are available live and free in Australia across SBS, SBS Viceland, and SBS On Demand.

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SBS is streaming every game for free Down Under, with the free-to-air Australian broadcast network televising all 104 games of the World Cup between its SBS and SBS Viceland channels, with live streaming available via its SBS On Demand platform. Coverage tops out at 1080p, and the broadcaster has also built out an intuitive World Cup hub, daily preview and highlights shows, and extensive highlights of each and every fixture, within the hour. SBS is completely free to use, with no messy sign-ups required — just a simple free World Cup stream, though access is restricted to viewers physically located within Australia.

Full Replays and Highlights Available Quickly

For fans who miss a live match or simply want to revisit key moments, SBS has built out an extensive library of replay and highlight content tied to every fixture. All 104 games of the World Cup are available to live stream on SBS On Demand. Not only that, but they’re all available as full replays within 40 minutes of the final whistle, as well as 30-minute, 12-minute, and three-minute highlights packages within an hour of full-time.

Full match replays are available after every match, including pre- and post-game coverage.

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Australia’s Group D Schedule

The Socceroos have been drawn into Group D for this year’s tournament, facing a trio of opponents across the group stage before any potential progression to the knockout rounds. Australia face the USA, Paraguay, and Türkiye in Group D. All three group matches are broadcast on SBS, allowing fans to watch free of charge.

Australia kicked off their World Cup participation on Sunday, June 14, in Australian Eastern Standard Time, as they faced Türkiye. Australia followed that result with their second group match against the United States on June 19, before completing the group stage against Paraguay.

Favorable Kickoff Times for Australian Viewers

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One of the more welcome aspects of this year’s tournament for Australian fans is the relatively convenient scheduling, a notable departure from past tournaments held in less favorable time zones. The 2026 World Cup is far more viewer-friendly for Australians than European-hosted tournaments. With most matches played in U.S. time zones, U.S. East Coast matches kick off around 2 a.m. to 8 a.m. AEST during early mornings, while U.S. West Coast matches kick off around 5 a.m. to 12 p.m. AEST during mornings to lunchtime. Mexico matches kick off around 3 a.m. to 10 a.m. AEST, and Canada matches kick off around 2 a.m. to 12 p.m. AEST.

Compared to Qatar 2022, where group matches kicked off between midnight and 6 a.m. AEST, the 2026 schedule offers significantly more accessible viewing hours for Australian fans. All three Socceroos group stage matches are being played on the U.S. West Coast — in Vancouver, Seattle, and Santa Clara. For Australian viewers, this means afternoon and lunchtime kickoffs for two of the three matches, with the USA fixture serving as the early-morning outlier. The Socceroos’ West Coast fixtures at 2 p.m. and 12 p.m. AEST are particularly convenient.

Watching From Outside Australia

For Australian expatriates or travelers currently located overseas who still want to access SBS’s free coverage, a virtual private network can provide a workaround to the platform’s geographic restrictions. A VPN allows users to choose the location they wish to connect to in the app — for instance, if someone is in the U.S. and wants to view an Australian service, they would select Australia from the list. From there, users can stream live by heading to SBS On Demand to catch every World Cup game for free.

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Additional Football Content Beyond Live Matches

Beyond live coverage of matches themselves, SBS has also curated a broader library of football programming designed to keep fans engaged throughout the tournament. In the lead-up to the World Cup, football fans could explore a wide range of football documentaries, videos, and highlights on SBS On Demand, including the FIFA+ FAST channel, offering a curated mix of football programming from across the global game. Available 24/7, the FIFA+ channel features live matches, classic games, and original series from both the men’s and women’s game.

SBS On Demand also features a collection of 60 classic FIFA World Cup matches from 1970 to 2022, including memorable Socceroos fixtures and some of the most iconic finals in tournament history.

Other Broadcast Options for Australian Viewers

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While SBS remains the primary and only fully free option for watching the Socceroos and the broader tournament, a small number of supplementary platforms may also carry coverage depending on existing rights arrangements. Australian broadcast rights for the 2026 FIFA World Cup are shared between free-to-air and streaming platforms. Optus Sport holds rights to UEFA and international football and is likely to carry full tournament coverage as an add-on or included package, while Stan Sport may carry supplementary coverage depending on sub-licensing agreements.

The Bigger Picture for the Tournament

This year’s expanded 48-team World Cup format has significantly increased the overall scale of the tournament compared to past editions, giving SBS an even larger broadcasting commitment to fulfill across the group stage and beyond. The 2026 World Cup, expanded from 32 teams to 48, features 12 groups of four and will include 104 games, instead of the 64 played in previous tournaments, running from June 11 through July 19 at 16 venues throughout North America.

With the Socceroos’ three group-stage fixtures against Türkiye, the United States, and Paraguay all confirmed for free broadcast on SBS, Australian fans have a clear and fully accessible path to following every match of their national team’s campaign without needing to pay for any additional streaming subscription. Should Australia progress past the group stages, any subsequent knockout-stage matches will also be added to SBS’s broadcast schedule, with specific start times to be confirmed as the tournament moves into its decisive later rounds.

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Brazil Eyes First Win Against Haiti After Sluggish Morocco Draw in World Cup Group C

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Folarin Balogun

PHILADELPHIA — Brazil hopes its 2026 World Cup gets going on Friday, taking on Haiti as Group C moves into matchday two of the tournament with the five-time champions looking for their first win after a sluggish start.

Carlo Ancelotti’s Seleção was sluggish in its opening match against Morocco, outplayed by the 2022 semifinalist and perhaps fortunate to escape without picking up a loss. The result left Brazil searching for answers heading into a far more favorable matchup on paper against a Haitian side appearing at the World Cup for the first time in 52 years.

Vinicíus Júnior Points to the Pitch

Brazil’s star forward offered a specific explanation for the team’s struggles in their opener, pointing to conditions at MetLife Stadium rather than tactical shortcomings. Vinicíus Júnior pointed the finger at the MetLife Stadium pitch, saying the dry playing surface made it difficult to get into Brazil’s usual rhythm. In Philadelphia, conditions won’t be any cooler, but the field at least isn’t sitting atop a hard synthetic surface below, offering the Brazilians at least one meaningful change in playing conditions as they look to find their footing.

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A Historic First Meeting in Decades

The matchup carries notable historical significance given how rarely these two nations have crossed paths on the World Cup stage. In Haiti, Brazil faces an opponent at the World Cup for the first time in 52 years, but the Caribbean nation has made clear it intends to do more than simply make up the numbers in Group C.

A Significant Talent Gap, but Signs of Competitiveness

Despite the considerable gap in overall quality between the two nations, Haiti has shown flashes of genuine competitiveness in its own World Cup opener that suggest this matchup may not be the complete mismatch the rankings would otherwise indicate. Brazil got better in the second half against Morocco, and that momentum should continue against a significantly weaker opponent — Haiti is ranked 85th in the world by FIFA after the opening round of matches, even falling below New Zealand in the live standings.

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Still, in narrow defeat, Haiti edged possession against Scotland and matched its opponent in expected goals at 1.05 xG, demonstrating an ability to at least compete at this level. Ultimately, however, it is a massive mismatch which ought to only produce one winner.

Brazil’s Path to Improvement

Analysts have identified a clear area where Brazil needs to show growth if it hopes to convert its talent advantage into an actual result on the scoreboard. Brazil will hope to create more than a single big chance in this match, which was the case against Morocco. A large part of that was due to being stifled by a strong opponent, but manufacturing opportunities more frequently remains important if the Seleção wants to assert its dominance against lesser opposition.

A Lopsided Head-to-Head History

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The two nations’ limited history on the pitch overwhelmingly favors Brazil by a remarkable margin. Haiti has only ever tasted defeat in meetings with Brazil across three prior matches, in 1974, 2004, and 2016. The Seleção has scored 17 goals to Haiti’s one across those encounters — a staggering disparity that underscores just how lopsided Friday’s matchup is expected to be on paper.

Predicted Lineups

Carlo Ancelotti is expected to make several changes to his starting lineup following Brazil’s underwhelming performance against Morocco. Despite an outstanding Premier League season, Brentford’s Igor Thiago underwhelmed on his opportunity to lead the line for his country at a World Cup and could pay the price. Manchester United’s Matheus Cunha is next in line — and actually wears the No. 9 jersey as well.

Former Real Madrid and Manchester City veteran Danilo could also be drafted into the starting eleven. He replaced Roger Ibañez, usually a center back, at halftime against Morocco after a first-half booking. Lucas Paquetá may also drop to the bench after Brazil’s first-match struggles.

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Brazil’s predicted lineup in a 4-4-2 formation: Alisson; Danilo, Marquinhos, Gabriel, Santos; Paquetá, Casemiro, Guimarães, Raphinha; Cunha, Vinicíus Jr.

On the Haitian side, manager Sébastien Migné faces only a slight doubt heading into the match. Beyond a slight doubt over Duckens Nazon, an unused substitute against Scotland, Haiti manager Sébastien Migné doesn’t have any issues to contend with. Given how close it was against the Scots, he could pick the same team for this match as well.

The main debate within Haiti’s lineup centers on a single position. The main question is whether Dallas FC’s Louicious Deedson keeps his starting place on the right flank — he was replaced after 61 minutes by Josué Casimir in the opening match and could be in danger of losing his starting role.

Haiti’s predicted lineup in a 4-4-2 formation: Placide; Arcus, Adé, Delcroix, Expérience; Deedson, Jacques, Bellegarde, Providence; Isidor, Pierrot.

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Score Prediction

Based on the significant talent disparity between the two nations and Brazil’s improved form as their opening match progressed, the expected outcome heavily favors the Seleção, with a final score prediction of Brazil 2, Haiti 0.

Match Details

The match will be played at Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia on Friday, June 19, with kickoff scheduled for 8:30 p.m. Eastern Time, 5:30 p.m. Pacific Time, or 1:30 a.m. British Summer Time on June 20.

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How to Watch

Viewers in the United States can watch the match on the FOX Network, fuboTV, Telemundo, Telemundo Deportes En Vivo, or FOX One. In Canada, coverage is available on TSN+, TSN4, TSN5, RDS, and the RDS App. Mexican viewers can tune in via ViX Mexico and TUDN, while viewers in the United Kingdom can watch on ITV1, ITVX, STV Scotland, and the STV Player.

What’s at Stake for Group C

With Scotland sitting atop Group C following their own opening win and Morocco having drawn with Brazil in the tournament’s early going, a victory for the Seleção on Friday would be a critical step toward repositioning themselves in contention for a favorable finish in the group. For Haiti, even a respectable defeat against one of the tournament’s traditional powerhouses would represent a meaningful marker of progress for a program competing at football’s biggest stage for the first time in more than five decades — while an upset, however unlikely given the historical and statistical gap between the sides, would rank among the most stunning results of the tournament’s opening rounds.

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BHP Flags $2.3 Billion Potash Write-Down as Costs Rise

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BHP Flags $2.3 Billion Potash Write-Down as Costs Rise

BHP Group said it expects to write down the value of its giant potash project in Canada by roughly $2.3 billion, as it announced another cost overrun on a mine that is set to become one of the biggest sources of the fertilizer ingredient globally.

The company said Thursday that it now expects an expansion of the Jansen project in Canada’s Saskatchewan province to cost $6.9 billion, up from an estimate of $4.9 billion when it approved the second-stage development in 2023.

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Thomas Kean Jr. makes multiple stock transactions, including Amcor plc and EQT Corporation

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Dave & Buster’s: Arcade Inflation Is Breaking The Value Equation (NASDAQ:PLAY)

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Dave & Buster's: Arcade Inflation Is Breaking The Value Equation (NASDAQ:PLAY)

This article was written by

I’m an equity analyst and founder of Goulart’s Restaurant Stocks, a research firm focused on the U.S. restaurant industry — from quick-service and fast casual to fine dining and niche concepts. I lead all thematic research and valuation efforts, applying advanced financial modeling, sector-specific KPIs, and strategic insights to uncover hidden value across public equities. In addition to restaurants, I cover consumer discretionary, food & beverage, casinos & gaming, and IPOs, with a particular focus on micro and small caps that are often overlooked by mainstream analysts. My research has been featured on Seeking Alpha, Yahoo Finance, Mises Institute, Investing.com and other plataforms. My background combines hands-on experience in finance and business management with academic foundations. I hold an MBA in Controllership and Accounting Forensics, a Bachelor’s in Business Administration. I’ve also pursued specialized training in valuation, financial modeling, and restaurant operations (I had a brief experience as an undergraduate as a franchise partner for a regional ice cream shop).

Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.

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Who had the best World Cup advert?

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Nike logo, Adidas logo, thinking face

BBC Sport looks at the numbers behind both Nike and Adidas’ World Cup adverts.

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Search Firm Pathfinders Breached, Exposing Board-Level Candidate Files for Clients

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The UK private sector is experiencing its lowest employment levels in a decade, as hiring decisions are clouded by uncertainty surrounding economic prospects amidst high interest rates and sluggish consumer demand.

Pathfinders, an UK executive search and board advisory firms led by Bruce and Penelope Wright is reported to have suffered a significant cyberattack in which intruders accessed and exfiltrated confidential candidate records, including succession plans and compensation data tied to some of its largest corporate clients.

The breach is notable less for its scale than for the sensitivity of what was taken. Executive search firms sit on some of the most closely guarded information in corporate life — confidential dossiers on who might next run a major company, what they are paid, and which directors are quietly being moved on. A leak of that material strikes directly at the discretion these firms sell.

What is known

Although significant amounts of data from Pathfinder has been published on the darkweb, the company has done no disclosure of the breach and none of the affected clients and individuals have been notified.

People familiar with the investigation, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorised to discuss it, said the intrusion appeared to have begun with compromised credentials which were then used to reach the firm’s candidate-management system. The attackers are believed to have had access for several weeks before detection — a dwell time the firm has not publicly confirmed.

A ransomware group operating under the name “BlackVellum” has claimed responsibility on the dark web. Whether a ransom had been demanded or paid is not known. The claim could not be independently verified, and attribution at this stage remains tentative.

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Whose data was exposed

The exposed material include candidate CVs, references, psychometric and leadership assessments, interview notes, and compensation details, as well as confidential board succession plans prepared for client companies.

For candidates, the exposure carries a particular sting: there is more than one senior cybersecurity executive whose personal data is now in circulation on the dark web and several other candidates had off-market conversations their current employers do not know about. For client companies, the leak risks revealing internal succession thinking — including which incumbents are being lined up to replace, and on what terms.

Regulatory and legal exposure

There is no indication that Pathfinder had notified the Information Commissioner’s Office, the UK’s data protection regulator. Under UK GDPR, organisations must report a qualifying personal-data breach within 72 hours of becoming aware of it, and can face fines of up to 4 percent of global annual turnover for serious failings. Legal specialists said the firm could also face claims from affected individuals and contractual disputes with clients whose data-handling expectations were not met.

The incident is likely to draw scrutiny of what security assurances Pathfinder gave clients in its engagement contracts, and whether its actual controls matched them — a gap that has proven costly for other professional-services firms.

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What the experts say

Security analysts said the case fits a wider pattern in which attackers increasingly target professional-services firms not for their own sake but as a route to their high-value clients. “A search firm is a concentration point,” one cyber risk consultant said. “Compromise one boutique and you potentially gain intelligence on dozens of major companies at once.”

Others pointed to the supply-chain entry point as the recurring weak link. Smaller advisory firms often hold exceptionally sensitive data while running leaner security operations than the corporations they serve, making them an attractive target.

What remains unresolved

Key questions are still open: how the credentials were obtained, exactly how long the attackers were inside, the full list of affected clients, and whether the stolen files will be published.

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Brent set for 8% weekly fall as Israel, Hezbollah agree ceasefire

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Brent set for 8% weekly fall as Israel, Hezbollah agree ceasefire

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Manchester Named UK’s Top City for Women Entrepreneurs Outside London

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Manchester Named UK's Top City for Women Entrepreneurs Outside London

Manchester has been named the leading UK city outside London to start a business, according to new research from National Women’s Enterprise Week, in findings that point to the growing pull of regional “hidden hubs” for women building companies away from the capital.

The survey of 1,000 female entrepreneurs found that 41 per cent named Manchester as either the best or second-best UK city outside London to launch a venture, with one in four (27 per cent) putting it in top spot. Birmingham followed on 14 per cent, with Liverpool on 5 per cent.

The picture that emerges is of women-led enterprise increasingly being built beyond the M25, with founders citing lower costs, greater flexibility and stronger regional opportunity as reasons to stay put. It is a trend already visible elsewhere in the country, with female entrepreneurship booming in the North East as well as across the North West.

National Women’s Enterprise Week was founded by Alison Cork MBE as a UK-wide campaign to help close the gender gap in business ownership. Around one in five UK businesses is currently woman-led, a figure that has climbed from 16 per cent in 2018 but still lags well behind the ambition set out in the government-backed Rose Review of Female Entrepreneurship, which set a target of nearly 600,000 more women founders by 2030.

The research, carried out by Sapio Research, set out to test whether funding, visibility and networks are keeping pace with where women-led businesses are actually being built. While London remains a critical centre for finance and dealmaking, the findings suggest that London-centric assumptions about growth risk disadvantaging founders who are choosing, deliberately, to build viable businesses elsewhere.

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More than half (52 per cent) of women entrepreneurs agree that building a business outside London offers greater opportunity, while the same proportion say lower costs are among the top benefits of basing a company beyond the capital.

Yet the old hierarchy has not gone away. Nearly six in ten (58 per cent) agree that businesses based in London are taken more seriously than those outside it, and 61 per cent believe a London address signals that a business is well-established or successful. Perception, in other words, has not caught up with practice.

If anything, that bias runs deeper among those writing the cheques. A separate survey of 200 business investors who have backed UK firms found that 78 per cent agree London-based businesses are taken more seriously, while 80 per cent say a London address signals success. More than half (52 per cent) have at some point required or encouraged a company they invest in to relocate to the capital.

Among women founders based outside London, more than a third (37 per cent) say they have felt pressure to move in order to grow. The majority, though, have no wish to leave: 76 per cent say that, if funding, visibility and opportunity were equal across the UK, they would still choose to base their business exactly where it is today.

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That tension, between where capital expects success to happen and where founders are choosing to build it, sits at the heart of the funding debate. It is a theme that runs through wider concerns about the gender finance gap, including evidence that women founders secure 25 per cent less than men at exit.

Alison Cork, founder of National Women’s Enterprise Week, said Manchester topping the list was significant, but that the bigger story lay in what it revealed about the changing geography of British enterprise.

“Women are building ambitious businesses in cities, towns and communities across the country, not just in London,” she said. “The opportunity is already there, but visibility, networks and investment have not always kept pace.

“What this research reveals is a tension between where founders see opportunity and where many people still believe success is supposed to happen. We need to stop thinking of regional growth as an alternative to London and start recognising it as a major driver of the UK’s entrepreneurial economy.”

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That argument aligns with the direction of national policy. The government’s Women-Led High-Growth Enterprise Taskforce has likewise pressed for investment and support to reach female founders wherever they are based, rather than concentrating opportunity in the South East.

The research also underlines how much support remains out of reach. Only 35 per cent of women entrepreneurs say they have all the access and backing they need, while 42 per cent say they have some but could do with more. A lack of funding and low visibility are the joint top challenges founders face in growing a business from their current location, each cited by 27 per cent, echoing the squeeze that has seen some female entrepreneurs take on second jobs as 2025 pressures grow.

The findings are being released to coincide with National Women’s Enterprise Week’s Own It: Speed Mentoring for Female Founders event on 19 June 2026, which is built around improving access to practical support, mentoring, networks and visibility for women founders across the UK.


Amy Ingham

Amy is a newly qualified journalist specialising in business journalism at Business Matters with responsibility for news content for what is now the UK’s largest print and online source of current business news.

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Vanguard report shows 401(k) balances hit highs as automatic enrollment spikes

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Why your 401(k) target date fund could be limiting growth potential

Americans’ contributions to their 401(k) savings accounts hit record highs in 2025, according to a new report from Vanguard. 

Among employees with active 401(k) accounts in both December 2024 and December 2025, median account balances increased by 27%, according to the report, titled How America Saves 2026

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Of those same participants, 94% saw an increase in their account balances, reflecting both a rise in contributions and strong returns from markets, according to the report. 

COULD THE VANGUARD S&P 500 ETF BE YOUR TICKET TO BECOMING A STOCK MARKET MILLIONAIRE?

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The average account balance for a Vanguard 401(k) was $167,970 in 2025, a near $20,000 increase from the 2024 average of $148,153. The median account balance, meanwhile, also increased year over year, rising from $38,176 in 2024 to $44,115 in 2025. 

One factor the report cites as a potential impact on the higher contributions is a shift in automatic employee enrollment. 

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BEWARE THE TICKING TIME BOMB HIDING IN YOUR 401(K)

Some employers have shifted to automatically enrolling employees in 401k plans, with the share of Vanguard-defined contribution plans using automatic enrollment sitting at 61% in 2025 compared with just 10% in 2006. 

By reframing an employee’s decision into opting out, rather than voluntarily opting in, employers encourage significantly stronger participation in retirement plans, according to the report. 

“With an autopilot design, individuals are automatically enrolled into the plan, their deferral rates are automatically increased each year, and their contributions are automatically invested in a balanced investment strategy. In such a plan, the decision to save is framed negatively: ‘Quit the plan if you’d like.’ And ’doing nothing; leads to participation in the plan and investment of assets in a long-term retirement portfolio,” the report states.

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American flags on the floor at the New York Stock Exchange in New York, on Aug. 18, 2025. (Michael Nagle/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

Employees deferred a similar percentage of their total incomes into plans in 2025 when compared with 2024, though deferral rates have broadly trended up in the last decade.

LABOR DEPARTMENT’S PROPOSAL IS A ‘HUGE STEP’ FOR YOUR 401(K), BLACKROCK’S NEFOUSE SAYS

The average deferral was 7.6% of an employee’s income in 2025, the same as it was in 2024, per the report. The median rate was 6.6% in 2025 compared with 6.7% in 2024. 

A quarter of all participants had a deferral rate of over 10% of their incomes. That compared with just 20% of participants deferring more than a tenth of their income in 2016, the report noted.  

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The report wasn’t all positive. Hardship withdrawals increased for the fourth straight year, rising to 6% in 2025 from 5% the previous year. While the report cited potential pressures from inflation and other economic challenges, it also noted that a recent streamlining in the process to apply for hardship withdrawals has “made retirement assets more accessible in times of need.”

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