401k Calculator – Estimate Your Retirement Balance
Quick Answer
A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement account that lets you contribute pre-tax income, often with an employer match. The IRS 2025 employee contribution limit is $23,500 ($31,000 if age 50+). Projected balance = future value of all contributions plus employer match, compounded at the expected annual return.
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e.g. 50 = employer matches 50 cents per dollar
Employer matches up to this % of your salary
Projected Balance at Retirement
$0
Total Employee Contributions
$0
Total Employer Match
$0
Total Investment Earnings
$0
How a 401(k) Works
A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored defined-contribution retirement plan that allows employees to save and invest a portion of their paycheck before taxes are taken out. According to the IRS, 401(k) plans are the most common type of employer-sponsored retirement plan in the United States. As of 2024, approximately 70 million Americans actively participate in a 401(k), holding a combined $7.7 trillion in assets according to the Investment Company Institute.
This calculator projects how much your 401(k) could grow by the time you retire. It takes your current balance, annual salary, contribution percentage, employer matching formula, and expected investment return to model the growth trajectory year by year. The employer match is essentially free money added on top of your contributions, making it one of the highest-return financial decisions available to workers. Use this alongside our retirement calculator to see whether your total savings will support your desired retirement lifestyle.
The 401(k) Growth Formula
Your 401(k) balance grows through the future value of a series of regular contributions compounding over time. The formula used by this calculator is:
FV = PV(1 + r)n + PMT × [((1 + r)n − 1) / r]
Where:
- FV = future value (projected balance at retirement)
- PV = present value (current 401k balance)
- r = monthly rate of return (annual return / 12)
- n = total months until retirement
- PMT = total monthly contribution (employee + employer match)
Worked example: A 30-year-old earning $75,000 with a $25,000 current balance contributes 10% ($7,500/year) and the employer matches 50% up to 6% of salary ($2,250/year). At a 7% annual return over 35 years to age 65, the projected balance is approximately $1,428,000. Of that, $262,500 came from the employee, $78,750 from the employer, and over $1 million from compound growth.
Key 401(k) Terms You Should Know
- Vesting schedule: Determines when you fully own employer-matched contributions. A 3-year cliff vesting means you get 0% until year 3, then 100%. A 6-year graded schedule might vest 20% per year starting in year 2.
- Employer match: The amount your employer contributes based on your own contributions. Common formulas include 50% match up to 6% of salary or dollar-for-dollar up to 3%.
- Catch-up contributions: Additional contributions allowed for employees aged 50 and older, above the standard annual limit.
- Required Minimum Distributions (RMDs): Mandatory withdrawals from Traditional 401(k)s that must begin at age 73 under the SECURE 2.0 Act. Roth 401(k)s are no longer subject to RMDs starting in 2024.
- Early withdrawal penalty: A 10% tax penalty on distributions taken before age 59.5, in addition to regular income tax on Traditional 401(k) withdrawals.
Traditional 401(k) vs Roth 401(k)
The key difference between Traditional and Roth 401(k) contributions is when you pay taxes. Your choice has a significant long-term impact on your retirement income.
| Feature | Traditional 401(k) | Roth 401(k) |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Pre-tax (reduces taxable income now) | After-tax (no current tax break) |
| Withdrawals | Taxed as ordinary income | Tax-free (if qualified) |
| RMDs | Required starting at age 73 | Not required (since 2024) |
| Best for | Higher tax bracket now, lower in retirement | Lower bracket now, higher in retirement |
| 2025 Contribution Limit | $23,500 ($31,000 if 50+) | $23,500 ($31,000 if 50+) |
Practical 401(k) Examples
Example 1 -- Early career, aggressive saver: Maria, age 25, earns $55,000 and contributes 15% ($8,250/year). Her employer matches dollar-for-dollar up to 3% ($1,650/year). With a $0 starting balance and 8% average return, she accumulates approximately $2,390,000 by age 65. Her total contributions are $330,000; the remaining $2.06 million comes from employer match and compound growth.
Example 2 -- Mid-career catch-up: James, age 45, earns $100,000 and has $150,000 saved. He contributes 10% ($10,000/year) with a 50% match up to 6% ($3,000/year). At 7% returns, he reaches approximately $860,000 by age 65. If he increases contributions to 15% and maxes out catch-up contributions starting at 50, the total rises to roughly $1,050,000.
Example 3 -- Late start, maximum effort: Sarah, age 55, earns $120,000 with $200,000 saved. She contributes the maximum $31,000 (including catch-up) with a 50% match up to 6% ($3,600/year). At 6% returns over 10 years, she reaches approximately $720,000. Starting late limits compounding time, but maximizing contributions and match still adds meaningful growth.
Tips to Maximize Your 401(k)
- Always capture the full employer match: Not contributing enough to get the full match is leaving free money on the table. If your employer matches 50% up to 6%, contribute at least 6%.
- Increase contributions with every raise: When you get a 3% raise, increase your 401(k) contribution by 1-2%. You will never miss money you did not see in your paycheck.
- Choose low-cost index funds: According to Vanguard, a 1% difference in expense ratios can reduce your balance by over 25% over 30 years. Target-date funds and S&P 500 index funds typically have expense ratios below 0.10%.
- Consider Roth contributions if you are early in your career: Lower-income years are the best time to pay taxes upfront through Roth contributions, as your future tax rate is likely to be higher.
- Avoid early withdrawals: A $50,000 withdrawal at age 35 costs you the $50,000 plus a $5,000 penalty plus income taxes, and you lose decades of compounding on that money -- potentially $300,000+ by retirement.
- Review and rebalance annually: Ensure your asset allocation still matches your risk tolerance and time horizon. Most plans offer automatic rebalancing features.
2025-2026 401(k) Contribution Limits
The IRS announced the following limits for 2025 tax year. For 2026, the employee limit is expected to increase to $24,000 based on cost-of-living adjustments, though the official announcement is pending.
| Limit Type | 2025 | 2024 |
|---|---|---|
| Employee contribution (under 50) | $23,500 | $23,000 |
| Catch-up contribution (50+) | $7,500 | $7,500 |
| Total employee + employer limit | $70,000 | $69,000 |
| Total with catch-up (50+) | $77,500 | $76,500 |