๐ฆ At Retirement
$1,202,531
at age 65 in 35 years
Enter your salary, contribution rate, and employer match to see your projected balance, annual tax savings, and the long-term cost of missing free employer money.
A 30-year-old earning $75,000 who contributes 6% with a 50% employer match up to 6% and earns a 7% annual return could accumulate roughly $1,202,531 by age 65. In this example, personal contributions add about $224,975 and employer matching adds another $112,488.
The rest comes from compound investment growth. Use the calculator above to replace the defaults with your own salary, age, match formula, and investment assumptions.
$4,500 / year | $173.08 / paycheck (bi-weekly)
๐ฆ At Retirement
$1,202,531
at age 65 in 35 years
๐ฐ Employer Match
$112,488
total free money over time
๐งพ Tax Savings
$990
estimated federal tax saved this year
Employer Match
You're capturing your full employer match.
Great work. Your current contribution rate already clears the employer match threshold.
Your 401(k) Tax Advantage
Your effective out-of-pocket cost for contributing $4,500 is about $3,150.
Actions
Copy the summary, export the annual table, share the URL, or print a planning report.
Watch your balance compound, compare annual contributions, and see how much of the final balance comes from your deposits versus market growth.
Compare a conservative plan, your current contribution rate, and a more aggressive path without changing any other assumption.
Conservative
3%
contribution rate
Your contribution
$2,250/yr
Employer match
$1,125/yr (partial match)
Federal tax saved
$495/yr
Balance at retirement
$655,639
Recommended
6%
contribution rate
Your contribution
$4,500/yr
Employer match
$2,250/yr (full match)
Federal tax saved
$990/yr
Balance at retirement
$1,202,531
Aggressive
10%
contribution rate
Your contribution
$7,500/yr
Employer match
$2,250/yr (full match)
Federal tax saved
$1,650/yr
Balance at retirement
$1,688,657
Expand the table to view salary, employee contributions, employer match, growth, and ending balance for every projected year.
| Year | Age | Salary | You Add | Employer | Growth | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 30 | $75,000 | $4,500 | $2,250 | $999 | $19,749 |
| 2026 | 31 | $76,500 | $4,590 | $2,295 | $1,507 | $28,142 |
| 2027 | 32 | $78,030 | $4,682 | $2,341 | $2,057 | $37,222 |
| 2028 | 33 | $79,591 | $4,775 | $2,388 | $2,652 | $47,037 |
| 2029 | 34 | $81,182 | $4,871 | $2,435 | $3,295 | $57,639 |
| 2030 | 35 | $82,806 | $4,968 | $2,484 | $3,989 | $69,080 |
| 2031 | 36 | $84,462 | $5,068 | $2,534 | $4,737 | $81,419 |
| 2032 | 37 | $86,151 | $5,169 | $2,585 | $5,544 | $94,717 |
| 2033 | 38 | $87,874 | $5,272 | $2,636 | $6,414 | $109,039 |
| 2034 | 39 | $89,632 | $5,378 | $2,689 | $7,350 | $124,456 |
| 2035 | 40 | $91,425 | $5,485 | $2,743 | $8,357 | $141,041 |
| 2036 | 41 | $93,253 | $5,595 | $2,798 | $9,440 | $158,874 |
| 2037 | 42 | $95,118 | $5,707 | $2,854 | $10,605 | $178,040 |
| 2038 | 43 | $97,020 | $5,821 | $2,911 | $11,856 | $198,628 |
| 2039 | 44 | $98,961 | $5,938 | $2,969 | $13,200 | $220,735 |
| 2040 | 45 | $100,940 | $6,056 | $3,028 | $14,643 | $244,462 |
| 2041 | 46 | $102,959 | $6,178 | $3,089 | $16,191 | $269,920 |
| 2042 | 47 | $105,018 | $6,301 | $3,151 | $17,852 | $297,223 |
| 2043 | 48 | $107,118 | $6,427 | $3,214 | $19,633 | $326,497 |
| 2044 | 49 | $109,261 | $6,556 | $3,278 | $21,542 | $357,872 |
| 2045 | 50 | $111,446 | $6,687 | $3,343 | $23,588 | $391,490 |
| 2046 | 51 | $113,675 | $6,820 | $3,410 | $25,779 | $427,500 |
| 2047 | 52 | $115,948 | $6,957 | $3,478 | $28,127 | $466,062 |
| 2048 | 53 | $118,267 | $7,096 | $3,548 | $30,640 | $507,346 |
| 2049 | 54 | $120,633 | $7,238 | $3,619 | $33,330 | $551,533 |
| 2050 | 55 | $123,045 | $7,383 | $3,691 | $36,210 | $598,817 |
| 2051 | 56 | $125,506 | $7,530 | $3,765 | $39,290 | $649,403 |
| 2052 | 57 | $128,016 | $7,681 | $3,840 | $42,586 | $703,510 |
| 2053 | 58 | $130,577 | $7,835 | $3,917 | $46,110 | $761,372 |
| 2054 | 59 | $133,188 | $7,991 | $3,996 | $49,879 | $823,238 |
| 2055 | 60 | $135,852 | $8,151 | $4,076 | $53,908 | $889,372 |
| 2056 | 61 | $138,569 | $8,314 | $4,157 | $58,215 | $960,058 |
| 2057 | 62 | $141,341 | $8,480 | $4,240 | $62,817 | $1.0M |
| 2058 | 63 | $144,167 | $8,650 | $4,325 | $67,735 | $1.1M |
| 2059 | 64 | $147,051 | $8,823 | $4,412 | $72,990 | $1.2M |
Salary: $75,000
Contribution rate: 6%
Projected balance: $1,202,531
Employer match total: $112,488
Federal tax saved this year: $990
| Year | Age | Salary | You Add | Employer | Growth | Balance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 30 | 75000 | 4500 | 2250 | 999 | 19749 |
| 2026 | 31 | 76500 | 4590 | 2295 | 1507 | 28142 |
| 2027 | 32 | 78030 | 4682 | 2341 | 2057 | 37222 |
| 2028 | 33 | 79591 | 4775 | 2388 | 2652 | 47037 |
| 2029 | 34 | 81182 | 4871 | 2435 | 3295 | 57639 |
| 2030 | 35 | 82806 | 4968 | 2484 | 3989 | 69080 |
| 2031 | 36 | 84462 | 5068 | 2534 | 4737 | 81419 |
| 2032 | 37 | 86151 | 5169 | 2585 | 5544 | 94717 |
| 2033 | 38 | 87874 | 5272 | 2636 | 6414 | 109039 |
| 2034 | 39 | 89632 | 5378 | 2689 | 7350 | 124456 |
| 2035 | 40 | 91425 | 5485 | 2743 | 8357 | 141041 |
| 2036 | 41 | 93253 | 5595 | 2798 | 9440 | 158874 |
| 2037 | 42 | 95118 | 5707 | 2854 | 10605 | 178040 |
| 2038 | 43 | 97020 | 5821 | 2911 | 11856 | 198628 |
| 2039 | 44 | 98961 | 5938 | 2969 | 13200 | 220735 |
| 2040 | 45 | 100940 | 6056 | 3028 | 14643 | 244462 |
| 2041 | 46 | 102959 | 6178 | 3089 | 16191 | 269920 |
| 2042 | 47 | 105018 | 6301 | 3151 | 17852 | 297223 |
| 2043 | 48 | 107118 | 6427 | 3214 | 19633 | 326497 |
| 2044 | 49 | 109261 | 6556 | 3278 | 21542 | 357872 |
| 2045 | 50 | 111446 | 6687 | 3343 | 23588 | 391490 |
| 2046 | 51 | 113675 | 6820 | 3410 | 25779 | 427500 |
| 2047 | 52 | 115948 | 6957 | 3478 | 28127 | 466062 |
| 2048 | 53 | 118267 | 7096 | 3548 | 30640 | 507346 |
| 2049 | 54 | 120633 | 7238 | 3619 | 33330 | 551533 |
| 2050 | 55 | 123045 | 7383 | 3691 | 36210 | 598817 |
| 2051 | 56 | 125506 | 7530 | 3765 | 39290 | 649403 |
| 2052 | 57 | 128016 | 7681 | 3840 | 42586 | 703510 |
| 2053 | 58 | 130577 | 7835 | 3917 | 46110 | 761372 |
| 2054 | 59 | 133188 | 7991 | 3996 | 49879 | 823238 |
| 2055 | 60 | 135852 | 8151 | 4076 | 53908 | 889372 |
| 2056 | 61 | 138569 | 8314 | 4157 | 58215 | 960058 |
| 2057 | 62 | 141341 | 8480 | 4240 | 62817 | 1035596 |
| 2058 | 63 | 144167 | 8650 | 4325 | 67735 | 1116306 |
| 2059 | 64 | 147051 | 8823 | 4412 | 72990 | 1202531 |
| Who | Annual Limit | Monthly | Per Paycheck (Bi-weekly) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under age 50 | $23,500 | $1,958 | $904 |
| Age 50-59 (catch-up) | $31,000 | $2,583 | $1,192 |
| Age 60-63 (super catch-up) | $34,750 | $2,896 | $1,336 |
| Age 64+ (regular catch-up) | $31,000 | $2,583 | $1,192 |
| Combined employee + employer max | $70,000 | - | - |
Source: IRS Notice 2024-80. Limits are shown using 2025 contribution rules and may change in later tax years.
A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement account that lets you defer part of your salary into long-term investments. When people look for a 401k contribution calculator, a 401k calculator, a 401k retirement calculator, or an employer match calculator, they are usually trying to answer two questions at once: how much should I contribute, and what could that decision be worth decades from now? The reason the answer matters is compounding. Small contribution changes early in a career can produce very large balance differences by retirement because every contribution gets more time to grow.
Traditional 401(k) contributions are generally made before federal income tax, which means your taxable income falls today and investment gains compound tax-deferred over time. That tax deferral is one reason the account is powerful, but the employer match is often an even bigger near-term lever. If your company offers a 50% match up to 6% of salary, failing to contribute 6% is equivalent to declining part of your compensation. In practical terms, that is free money you only receive if you make the matching employee contribution first.
This calculator focuses on the contribution side of the equation. It estimates your projected balance, separates your own contributions from employer money and investment growth, and shows how much federal tax you save by contributing today. It also lets you compare multiple contribution-rate scenarios side by side. That is useful because many workers know they should contribute more, but they do not have a clean way to visualize the long-term difference between 3%, 6%, and 10% plans. If you also want to see the paycheck impact of pre-tax deductions, you can pair this page with the salary tax calculator and the main pay raise calculator.
The projection begins with your current balance, annual salary, contribution rate, employer match formula, expected salary growth, annual return assumption, and annual fees. Each year, the calculator estimates your employee contribution, caps it at the relevant IRS limit, adds any employer match that applies, and then estimates growth on both the starting balance and the mid-year flow of new contributions. This is a simplified model, but it is fast, transparent, and directionally useful for planning.
Tax savings are shown separately because they answer a different question. Your projected retirement balance tells you the long-term value of contributing. The tax savings card tells you what that contribution costs you today after estimated federal and state income tax reductions. That makes it easier to see why the true out-of-pocket cost of a traditional 401(k) contribution is lower than the raw contribution amount.
Missing the full match usually means walking away from an immediate, guaranteed return that is hard to beat anywhere else in personal finance.
Slow automatic increases can lift your savings rate without making each paycheck adjustment feel disruptive.
A seemingly small expense ratio difference compounds against you for decades, so low-cost index options can materially improve net outcomes.
Rollovers preserve the tax shelter and keep your compounding engine running instead of interrupting it with taxes and penalties.
The extra room available after age 50, and especially at ages 60 to 63 in 2025, can meaningfully improve late-career retirement readiness.
| Feature | Traditional 401(k) | Roth 401(k) |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Pre-tax | After-tax |
| Tax on growth | Tax-deferred | Tax-free |
| Withdrawals in retirement | Taxed as income | Tax-free when qualified |
| Best for | Higher tax bracket now | Lower tax bracket now |
| 2025 contribution limit | $23,500 combined | $23,500 combined |
| RMDs required | Yes, at age 73 | No for designated Roth balances starting in 2024 |
These answers are rendered directly into the HTML so search engines can read the full content without relying on client-side expansion logic.
The 2025 employee 401(k) contribution limit is $23,500 if you are under age 50. Workers age 50 to 59 can contribute up to $31,000 because they qualify for a $7,500 catch-up contribution, while workers age 60 to 63 can contribute up to $34,750 under the larger 2025 super catch-up rule. Once you reach age 64, the regular catch-up limit applies again.
You should contribute at least enough to capture your full employer match, because that is the highest-return money available in most retirement plans. After that, a common long-term target is saving 10% to 15% of income across retirement accounts. The right number depends on your age, salary, debt load, emergency savings, and whether you are also funding an IRA or HSA.
Employer 401(k) matching means your company adds money to your retirement account when you contribute from your paycheck. A common formula is a 50% match up to 6% of salary, which means contributing 6% unlocks an extra 3% of salary from your employer. If you contribute less than the match threshold, you leave part of that benefit behind and reduce your long-term compounding.
A reasonable long-run planning assumption for a diversified stock-heavy 401(k) is often around 6% to 7% after inflation-sensitive caution, even though equity markets have delivered higher historical averages in some periods. Using a conservative estimate is useful because retirement projections are highly sensitive to compounding. If you hold a more balanced or bond-heavy allocation, your expected return may be lower.
Yes, you can usually contribute to both a 401(k) and an IRA in the same year because they have separate contribution limits. For 2025, the IRA contribution limit is $7,000 for most savers, with an additional catch-up amount available at age 50 and older. The main caveat is that tax deductibility for a traditional IRA can phase out when you also participate in a workplace retirement plan.
When you leave a job, your 401(k) money generally remains yours, although some employer contributions may depend on vesting rules. You can often leave the account where it is, roll it into a new employer plan, or move it into an IRA. Cashing out is usually the weakest option because it can trigger current income taxes and early-withdrawal penalties while interrupting long-term compounding.
A catch-up contribution is the extra amount older workers are allowed to save above the standard annual 401(k) limit. In 2025, savers age 50 and older can contribute an additional $7,500, bringing the total employee limit to $31,000. Workers age 60 to 63 get an even larger super catch-up allowance of $11,250, which raises the 2025 total limit to $34,750.
A traditional 401(k) reduces current taxes because your contributions are generally made on a pre-tax basis, which lowers federal taxable income and often lowers state taxable income too. The immediate tax benefit depends on your marginal tax bracket and your state of residence. Payroll taxes such as Social Security and Medicare usually still apply, so the tax savings mainly come from income taxes rather than FICA.
The main difference is when you pay tax. Traditional 401(k) contributions are generally pre-tax, so they reduce taxable income today and withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income. Roth 401(k) contributions are made after tax, so they do not lower current taxable income, but qualified withdrawals in retirement can be tax-free. The better option depends on whether your tax rate is likely higher now or later.
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