401(k) Calculator — Project Your Retirement Balance
Enter your salary, contribution rate, and employer match formula to see your projected 401(k) balance at retirement — including year-by-year growth chart, employer match ("free money"), and annual tax savings. Updated for 2025 and 2026 IRS limits including SECURE 2.0 catch-up rules.
Enter your details to project your 401(k) balance at retirement
Always contribute at least enough to get your full employer match — it is the highest guaranteed return available to you.
Rate this calculator
How to use the 401(k) calculator
The most complete free 401(k) retirement calculator
401(k) Complete Guide — Contribution Limits, Employer Match, and Retirement Projection
A 401(k) is the most powerful retirement savings tool available to most American workers. Named after section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code, it lets you contribute pre-tax (or Roth after-tax) dollars from your paycheck into an investment account that grows tax-advantaged until retirement. Understanding how to maximise it — especially the employer match — can mean hundreds of thousands of additional dollars in retirement.
401(k) contribution limits for 2025
In 2025, employees can contribute up to $23,500 of their own salary to a 401(k) plan. The combined employee and employer contribution limit is $70,000. Age-based catch-up contributions are available: employees aged 50–59 and 64+ can contribute an additional $7,500 for a total of $31,000. Employees aged 60–63 benefit from the SECURE 2.0 "super catch-up" of $11,250, for a total of $34,750, if their plan allows it.
401(k) contribution limits for 2026
For 2026, the employee contribution limit increases to $24,500. The combined limit rises to $72,000. The standard catch-up contribution for ages 50–59 and 64+ increases to $8,000 (total $32,500). The super catch-up for ages 60–63 remains $11,250 (total $35,750). Additionally, a major SECURE 2.0 rule takes effect in 2026: employees who earned $150,000 or more in prior-year wages must make all catch-up contributions as Roth (after-tax) contributions.
How does 401(k) employer match work?
An employer match is free money added to your 401(k) based on your own contributions. The most common formula is 100% match up to 3% or 4% of salary, meaning your employer contributes $1 for every $1 you put in, up to 3–4% of your gross pay. For an employee earning $80,000, a 100% match up to 3% means the employer contributes up to $2,400/year for free. The second most common formula is 50% match up to 6% — the employer contributes $0.50 for every $1 you put in, up to 6% of salary, for a maximum employer contribution of 3% of salary ($2,400 on $80,000). Always contribute at least enough to get the full employer match before anything else — it is an immediate 50–100% return on your money.
How much should I contribute to my 401(k)?
The standard recommendation from financial planners follows a priority order: first, contribute enough to get the full employer match (this is the highest guaranteed return available). Second, consider maxing out a Roth IRA ($7,000 in 2025). Third, return to your 401(k) and increase contributions toward the $23,500 limit. A common total savings target is 15% of gross income including employer match. If you're starting late, the catch-up provisions allow significantly higher contributions once you reach 50 (and especially 60–63 under SECURE 2.0).
Traditional 401(k) vs Roth 401(k)
A traditional 401(k) is funded with pre-tax dollars: your contribution is deducted from your taxable income today, reducing your tax bill. Withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income. A Roth 401(k) is funded with after-tax dollars: no immediate tax benefit, but withdrawals in retirement are completely tax-free. Unlike a Roth IRA, a Roth 401(k) has no income limits — anyone can contribute regardless of income. Both have the same annual contribution limits ($23,500 in 2025). The choice depends on the same logic as Roth vs Traditional IRA: if you expect a higher tax rate in retirement, Roth is usually better; if lower, Traditional is usually better.
The power of employer match and compound growth
Consider an employee earning $80,000 who contributes 6% ($4,800/year) and receives a 50% match up to 6% ($2,400/year employer match). Total invested per year: $7,200. Over 30 years at 7% annual return, this grows to approximately $728,000. The employer match alone ($2,400/year for 30 years at 7%) would compound to about $243,000 — more than a third of the total balance — at zero cost to the employee. This illustrates why capturing the full employer match is always the first priority.
What happens if you leave your job?
Your employee contributions to a 401(k) are always 100% vested immediately — they are yours. Employer match contributions may be subject to a vesting schedule, meaning you only keep the employer match after working for a certain period (common: 3–6 years, either cliff vesting or graded vesting). When you leave, you have four options: roll over to your new employer's 401(k), roll over to an IRA (usually the best option for investment flexibility), leave it with your former employer (if balance is above $5,000), or cash out (triggers income tax plus 10% early withdrawal penalty if under 59½).
2025 & 2026 401(k) Contribution Limits
| Limit | 2025 | 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Employee contribution limit (under 50) | $23,500 | $24,500 |
| Catch-up (ages 50–59 and 64+) | $7,500 | $8,000 |
| Total employee limit (ages 50–59 and 64+) | $31,000 | $32,500 |
| Super catch-up (ages 60–63, SECURE 2.0) | $11,250 | $11,250 |
| Total employee limit (ages 60–63) | $34,750 | $35,750 |
| Combined employee + employer limit | $70,000 | $72,000 |
| Max compensation considered | $350,000 | $360,000 |
| Highly compensated employee (HCE) threshold | $160,000 | $160,000 |
| Roth catch-up required (prior year wages) | N/A | $150,000+ |
401(k) calculator FAQ
Minimum: enough to get your full employer match (free money). Target: 15% of gross income including employer match. If you can't reach 15% immediately, increase by 1% per year. After getting full match, consider maxing out a Roth IRA before increasing 401(k) further.
2025: $23,500 employee limit. Ages 50-59 and 64+: additional $7,500 catch-up = $31,000 total. Ages 60-63 (SECURE 2.0): additional $11,250 = $34,750 total. Combined employee + employer limit: $70,000.
2026: $24,500 employee limit. Ages 50-59 and 64+: additional $8,000 catch-up = $32,500 total. Ages 60-63: additional $11,250 = $35,750 total. Combined employee + employer limit: $72,000. Employees with prior-year wages over $150,000 must make all catch-up contributions as Roth in 2026.
Your employer matches your contributions up to a limit. Common formula: 100% match up to 3-4% of salary (dollar-for-dollar on first 3-4%). Another: 50% match up to 6% ($0.50 per $1 on first 6%). Always contribute at least enough to get the full match - it is an immediate 50-100% return.
Yes, if you have no high-interest debt and have an emergency fund. A traditional 401(k) reduces taxable income dollar-for-dollar. Priority order: get full employer match first, then Roth IRA, then max out 401(k). The tax-deferred (or tax-free for Roth) compound growth is highly valuable over decades.
Traditional: pre-tax contributions, reduces taxable income now, pay tax on withdrawals in retirement. Roth: after-tax contributions, no immediate deduction, withdrawals in retirement are tax-free. Same contribution limits. No income limits for either (unlike Roth IRA). Choose Traditional if you expect lower taxes in retirement; Roth if you expect higher taxes.
Under SECURE 2.0, employees ages 60-63 can make a higher "super catch-up" contribution of $11,250 in 2025 and 2026 (vs $7,500/$8,000 for other employees 50+). This allows a total employee contribution of $34,750 (2025) or $35,750 (2026) for those in this age range, if the plan allows it.
Your employee contributions are always 100% yours (immediately vested). Employer match may have a vesting schedule (3-6 years typically). Options: roll over to new employer's 401(k), roll over to IRA (usually best for flexibility), leave with old employer (if balance over $5,000), or cash out (triggers tax plus 10% penalty if under 59.5).
The LazyTools 401(k) Calculator is 100% free with no signup. Enter salary, contribution rate, employer match formula, age, and return rate to see your projected retirement balance with year-by-year chart and employer match amount. No account, no limits.