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The 401(k) Contribution Limit Calculator determines the maximum amount you can contribute to your employer-sponsored 401(k) plan for the 2025 tax year, including the $23,500 employee elective deferral limit, the $7,500 catch-up contribution for participants aged 50 and older (with a special $11,250 enhanced catch-up for ages 60-63 under SECURE 2.0), and the $70,000 total annual addition limit (Section 415(c)) combining employee deferrals, employer matching, and after-tax contributions. The calculator also factors in employer match formulas, vesting schedules, and the impact of the Highly Compensated Employee (HCE) nondiscrimination rules that may further restrict contributions for top earners. Maximizing your 401(k) is one of the most powerful retirement savings strategies available due to tax-deferred growth and potential employer matching.
Total 401(k) Additions = Employee Deferral (up to $23,500) + Catch-Up (up to $7,500 or $11,250 ages 60-63) + Employer Match + After-Tax Contributions, limited to the lesser of $70,000 or 100% of compensation
- 1Enter your annual salary and your planned contribution percentage or dollar amount. The 2025 employee elective deferral limit is $23,500 for pre-tax Traditional and/or Roth 401(k) contributions combined.
- 2If you are age 50 or older by December 31, 2025, you may contribute an additional $7,500 catch-up contribution above the $23,500 limit. If you are ages 60-63, SECURE 2.0 Act provides an enhanced catch-up of $11,250 instead of $7,500.
- 3Enter your employer's matching formula (e.g., 100% match on the first 3% plus 50% on the next 2%, or a flat dollar match). The calculator computes the employer contribution and checks it against the Section 415(c) limit.
- 4The total of all contributions (employee deferrals + catch-up + employer match + employer profit sharing + after-tax employee contributions) cannot exceed $70,000 for 2025 (or $77,500 with the standard catch-up, or $81,250 with the enhanced 60-63 catch-up).
- 5The calculator checks if you are a Highly Compensated Employee (HCE) for 2025: an employee earning more than $160,000 in the prior year or owning more than 5% of the business. HCEs may face additional limits under ADP/ACP nondiscrimination testing.
- 6Review the tax impact: pre-tax (Traditional) contributions reduce your current taxable income; Roth 401(k) contributions are after-tax but provide tax-free withdrawals in retirement. Many plans now offer both options.
- 7Calculate per-paycheck deferral amounts by dividing your annual target by your number of pay periods. Ensure the final paycheck of the year does not exceed the limit, as some plans lack an auto-stop feature.
Employee contributes 15% x $100,000 = $15,000 (below $23,500 limit). Employer matches 50% of the first 6% of salary: 50% x 6% x $100,000 = $3,000. Total annual addition: $18,000, well within the $70,000 Section 415(c) limit.
At 52, the catch-up contribution of $7,500 applies. Employee defers $31,000. Employer matches 100% of 4% of $150,000 = $6,000. Total $37,000 is well under the $77,500 overall limit ($70,000 + $7,500 catch-up).
Under SECURE 2.0, participants aged 60-63 get an enhanced catch-up of $11,250 (the greater of $10,000 or 150% of the standard $7,500, indexed for inflation). Total employee contribution is $34,750. Employer matches 4% of $180,000 = $7,200. Total $41,950.
The Section 415(c) limit of $70,000 minus employee deferral ($23,500) minus employer contributions ($12,000) leaves $34,500 in after-tax contribution room. If the plan allows in-plan Roth conversions or in-service withdrawals, this after-tax money can be rolled to a Roth IRA (mega backdoor Roth strategy).
Employees setting their annual contribution percentage during open enrollment to maximize tax-deferred savings while staying within the $23,500 deferral limit.
Workers aged 50+ accelerating retirement savings by adding the catch-up contribution, adding $7,500-$11,250 extra per year to their nest egg.
Financial planners calculating the true employer match value to demonstrate the 'free money' incentive and determine optimal contribution percentages for clients.
High-income professionals evaluating the mega backdoor Roth strategy by contributing after-tax dollars up to the $70,000 415(c) limit and converting to Roth.
HR teams designing competitive 401(k) matching formulas and ensuring the plan passes annual nondiscrimination testing (ADP/ACP tests) for HCEs.
Highly Compensated Employees (HCE) Restrictions
If you earned more than $160,000 in 2024, you are classified as an HCE for the 2025 plan year. Your 401(k) deferral may be limited to as little as 2% of salary if rank-and-file employees contribute insufficiently to pass the ADP test. The ADP test requires that HCE average deferral percentage not exceed non-HCE average by more than 2 percentage points (or 125% of non-HCE average). Safe harbor 401(k) plans avoid this testing by providing mandatory employer contributions.
Multiple 401(k) Plans in One Year
If you change jobs mid-year and contribute to two 401(k) plans, the $23,500 deferral limit applies across ALL plans combined. Each employer does not know about the other, so you must track contributions yourself. Excess deferrals must be requested back from one plan by April 15 of the following year. However, the $70,000 Section 415(c) limit applies separately to each employer's plan.
Solo 401(k) for Self-Employed
Self-employed individuals can establish a Solo 401(k) and contribute as both employee ($23,500 deferral + catch-up) and employer (up to 25% of net self-employment income after the deductible half of SE tax). The total from both roles cannot exceed $70,000 (plus catch-up). This makes the Solo 401(k) one of the most tax-advantaged savings vehicles for freelancers and consultants.
| Limit Type | 2025 Amount | Applicable Group |
|---|---|---|
| Employee Elective Deferral | $23,500 | All participants |
| Standard Catch-Up (age 50-59, 64+) | $7,500 | Participants age 50+ |
| Enhanced Catch-Up (age 60-63, SECURE 2.0) | $11,250 | Participants age 60-63 |
| Total Annual Addition (Section 415(c)) | $70,000 | All sources combined |
| Total w/ Standard Catch-Up | $77,500 | Age 50-59 or 64+ |
| Total w/ Enhanced Catch-Up | $81,250 | Age 60-63 |
| HCE Compensation Threshold | $160,000 | Prior year compensation |
| Key Employee Officer Threshold | $230,000 | Top-heavy plan testing |
| Annual Compensation Limit | $350,000 | Max compensation for contribution calculations |
What happens if I exceed the $23,500 deferral limit?
Excess deferrals must be corrected by April 15 of the following year by requesting a return of excess contributions from your plan administrator. If not corrected, the excess is taxed twice: once in the year of deferral and again when distributed in retirement. If you have two 401(k) plans, you are responsible for monitoring the combined limit.
Does my employer match count toward the $23,500 limit?
No. Employer matching and profit-sharing contributions have their own limit under Section 415(c). The $23,500 limit applies only to your employee elective deferrals. However, employer contributions do count toward the $70,000 total annual addition limit.
Should I choose Traditional (pre-tax) or Roth 401(k)?
Pre-tax contributions are better if you are in a high tax bracket now and expect a lower bracket in retirement. Roth is better if you expect the same or higher bracket in retirement, or if you want tax-free withdrawals and no RMDs (Roth 401(k) RMDs were eliminated by SECURE 2.0 starting in 2024). Many advisors recommend splitting between both for tax diversification.
What is the SECURE 2.0 enhanced catch-up for ages 60-63?
Starting in 2025, participants aged 60-63 can make catch-up contributions of $11,250 (the greater of $10,000 or 150% of the standard catch-up, indexed for inflation) instead of the regular $7,500. This provides a four-year window to supercharge retirement savings before the standard catch-up resumes at age 64.
Can I contribute to a 401(k) and an IRA in the same year?
Yes, they have separate limits. You can contribute $23,500 to your 401(k) and $7,000 to an IRA ($8,000 if 50+) in the same year. However, having a 401(k) may reduce the deductibility of Traditional IRA contributions if your income exceeds the phase-out thresholds.
What happens to my 401(k) if I leave my job?
Your vested balance belongs to you. Options include: leaving it in the former employer's plan, rolling it to your new employer's plan, rolling it to an IRA (most flexibility), or cashing out (triggers income tax plus 10% penalty if under 59.5). Direct rollover to an IRA is usually the best choice for investment flexibility.
Sfat Pro
At minimum, contribute enough to get your full employer match. Then consider maxing out an IRA ($7,000) before increasing 401(k) contributions beyond the match, since IRAs typically offer broader and lower-cost investment options. Only after maxing the IRA should you increase 401(k) deferrals toward the $23,500 cap.
Știai că?
The 401(k) plan was never designed to be the primary retirement savings vehicle for American workers. It originated from a provision in the Revenue Act of 1978 (Section 401(k) of the Internal Revenue Code) intended to clarify tax treatment of deferred compensation for executives. Benefits consultant Ted Benna at The Johnson Companies recognized its potential for broad employee savings plans in 1980, creating the first modern 401(k) plan. Today, over 70 million Americans participate in 401(k) plans holding over $7.7 trillion in assets.