401k Calculator
Project your 401(k) balance at retirement based on your current savings, contribution rate, employer match, and expected returns. See how your investment grows year by year, how much your employer match adds, and how contributions compare to gains. The 2026 elective deferral limit is $24,500 ($32,500 at age 50+; $35,750 for ages 60–63).
401k Calculator · 2026
Balance projection · employer match · year-by-year growth · 2026 contribution limits
Enter your salary, contribution rate, and employer match to project your 401(k) balance at retirement.
* Assumes constant contribution rate, salary growing at the stated rate, and a consistent annual return. 401(k) growth is tax-deferred, meaning no taxes owed during accumulation. Employer match shown assumes contributions spread evenly across all pay periods. 2026 IRS elective deferral limit: $24,500 (under 50) / $32,500 (50+) / $35,750 (ages 60–63). Results are for illustration only.
* The "cutoff risk" flag appears when your contribution rate would reach the IRS elective deferral limit before your last pay period of the year. If your 401(k) hits the IRS limit before December, your employer may stop matching for the remaining pay periods. Spreading contributions evenly across all pay periods avoids this. 2026 limits: $24,500 (under 50) / $32,500 (50+) / $35,750 (ages 60–63).
How a 401(k) Calculator Works
A 401(k) growth calculator projects how your retirement balance compounds over time based on your contributions, employer match, expected investment return, and years until retirement. It runs year-by-year compounding on your growing balance, adding your contributions and employer match each year, then applying investment growth on the entire amount.
The most powerful insight from a 401(k) projection is the split between what you contribute, what your employer contributes, and what the market provides. In many cases, investment growth dwarfs both. A $80,000 salary worker contributing 10% ($8,000/year) with a 50% match on 6% (a $2,400 employer contribution), investing at 7% for 30 years from a $0 starting balance, ends up with approximately $860,000, of which $240,000 is personal contributions, $72,000 is employer match, and roughly $548,000 is investment growth. Time and compound growth drive the majority of the outcome, well ahead of the contribution rate.
2026 401(k) Contribution Limits
The IRS sets annual elective deferral limits on how much employees can contribute to their 401(k). The 2026 limits increased from 2025 due to inflation adjustments. SECURE 2.0 Act provisions also introduced a new "super catch-up" for workers in their early 60s, and a mandatory Roth catch-up rule for high earners that takes full effect in 2026.
| Age Group | 2026 Limit | vs 2025 | Breakdown |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 50 | $24,500 | +$1,000 | Base deferral only |
| 50–59 and 64+ | $32,500 | +$1,500 | $24,500 + $8,000 catch-up |
| Ages 60–63 (super catch-up) | $35,750 | New/raised | $24,500 + $11,250 SECURE 2.0 |
| Combined (employer + employee) | $72,000 | +$2,000 | All sources combined |
| Combined with catch-up (50+) | $80,000 | +$2,500 | Including $8,000 catch-up |
| Combined with super catch-up (60–63) | $83,250 | Raised | Including $11,250 super catch-up |
* Source: IRS Notice 2025-67. The super catch-up replaces (does not add to) the standard $8,000 catch-up for ages 60–63. Compensation limit for 2026: $360,000.
How to Use This 401k Calculator
The Employer Match: Free Money You Should Never Leave Behind
An employer match is an immediate, guaranteed return on your contribution. A 100% match on the first 3% of salary (dollar for dollar) is a 100% return on those dollars before investment gains are even considered. No bond, CD, or savings account provides that. A 50% match on 6% of salary, the most common formula in the US, represents a 50% guaranteed return on the matched portion.
Failing to contribute enough to capture the full employer match is one of the most costly financial mistakes available to workers. On an $80,000 salary with a 50%/6% match, leaving the match uncaptured costs you $2,400 in free money per year, plus the compounding on that $2,400 over 30 years at 7%, which totals over $180,000 in foregone retirement savings.
The Match Limit Cutoff Problem
If your contribution rate causes you to hit the IRS annual limit ($24,500 for under-50 workers in 2026) before your last pay period of the year, your employer may stop matching for the remaining pay periods. This is the most common way workers inadvertently leave employer match on the table. The solution: spread your contributions evenly across all pay periods at a rate that reaches the IRS limit at or near your final December paycheck. Use the Employer Match Optimizer tab in the calculator above to identify the optimal rate for your pay schedule.
401(k) Growth: Traditional vs. Roth
Both traditional and Roth 401(k) plans have the same contribution limits and employer match rules. The difference is when taxes apply.
| Traditional 401(k) | Roth 401(k) | |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Pre-tax (reduce taxable income now) | After-tax (no deduction now) |
| Growth | Tax-deferred (taxes owed at withdrawal) | Tax-free (no taxes at qualified withdrawal) |
| Withdrawals in retirement | Taxed as ordinary income | Tax-free (if qualified) |
| RMDs | Required starting at age 73 | None required (Roth 401k aligned with Roth IRA rules since 2024) |
| Best for | Expect lower tax rate in retirement | Expect same or higher tax rate in retirement |
| 2026 employee contribution limit | $24,500 (combined Roth + traditional) | $24,500 (combined Roth + traditional) |
