Free Retirement Calculators —
401k, FIRE, Roth IRA & More.
10 free retirement calculators — 401k growth, FIRE, Roth vs. Traditional IRA, Social Security, withdrawal rate & more. Every calculation runs instantly in your browser. No account. No data stored.
10 Free Retirement Calculators
How These Free Retirement Calculators Work
Every calculation runs inside your browser. Nothing leaves your device. Nothing is ever stored or shared.
1. Enter your numbers
Type in your age, current savings, and contribution rate. Every field has sensible defaults — start in seconds.
2. Results appear instantly
No submit button. No spinner. Results appear as you type — adjust any field and see your scenario update instantly.
3. Make a confident decision
Make confident retirement decisions knowing your real numbers — based on your actual inputs, not industry averages.
Retirement Planning Questions Answered
Straight answers to the retirement questions people search for most.
Now that you know the plan — here's how your savings stack up against other Americans your age.
Average 401k Balance by Age — Is Yours on Track?
The most comprehensive publicly available 401k data, drawn from Vanguard's How America Saves 2024 report covering 5 million participant accounts — the definitive annual benchmark for retirement savers.
401k Balance by Age Group
Average & median balances · Fidelity benchmark ratio · On-track status
| Age Group | Average Balance | Median Balance |
|---|---|---|
| Under 25 | $7,351 | $2,816 |
| 25–34 | $37,557 | $14,933 |
| 35–44 | $91,281 | $35,537 |
| 45–54 | $168,646 | $60,763 |
| 55–64 | $244,750 | $87,571 |
| 65 and over | $272,588 | $88,488 |
📊 Why Average > Median Every Time
In the 55–64 age group, the average is $244,750 but the median is just $87,571 — less than 36% of the average. A small number of workers with $500k+ balances pull the average dramatically upward. The median is what most people actually have.
🎯 The Fidelity Benchmark Explained
Fidelity's multiples (1× at 30, 3× at 40, 6× at 50, 10× at 67) are based on your own salary, not a fixed number. A 40-year-old earning $60k needs $180k; a 40-year-old earning $120k needs $360k. Use the 401k Growth Calculator above to model your personal trajectory.
How does your 401k compare to the benchmark?
Enter your balance, age, and contribution rate to see your projected balance at retirement — and whether you're on track for the Fidelity 10× target.
Data: Vanguard How America Saves 2024 report (2023 plan year). Fidelity benchmarks per Fidelity Investments retirement research. This data is for informational purposes only.
2025 Retirement Account Contribution Limits
Every retirement account limit for 2025, updated for SECURE 2.0 changes including the new ages 60–63 super catch-up provision. Bookmark this page — limits are adjusted each October for inflation.
Source: IRS Notice 2024-80 · Effective Jan 1, 2025
Workplace Retirement Plans
401k, 403b, 457(b), TSP, SARSEP
| Provision | 2025 Limit |
|---|---|
| Employee elective deferralStandard annual limit for all employees | $23,500 |
| Catch-up contribution (ages 50–59 and 64+)Standard catch-up on top of base limit | $7,500 |
| Super catch-up 🆕 (ages 60–63 only)New SECURE 2.0 provision | $11,250 |
| Total limit age 50–59 and 64+Employee deferral + standard catch-up | $31,000 |
| Total limit ages 60–63 🆕Employee deferral + super catch-up | $34,750 |
| Annual additions limit (total)Employee + employer + after-tax contributions combined | $70,000 |
IRA Contribution Limits
Traditional IRA, Roth IRA, Spousal IRA
| Provision | 2025 Limit |
|---|---|
| IRA contribution limit (all types)Combined Traditional + Roth cannot exceed this | $7,000 |
| Catch-up contribution (age 50+)Additional amount on top of base limit | $1,000 |
| Total IRA limit age 50+ | $8,000 |
| Roth IRA income phase-out — Single/HoH | $150k–$165k |
| Roth IRA income phase-out — MFJ | $236k–$246k |
Self-Employed & Other Plans
SEP-IRA, SIMPLE IRA, Solo 401k, HSA
| Account Type | 2025 Limit |
|---|---|
| SEP-IRA | $70,000 |
| SIMPLE IRA (employee deferral) | $16,500 |
| SIMPLE IRA catch-up (age 50+) | $3,500 |
| SIMPLE IRA super catch-up 🆕 (ages 60–63) | $5,250 |
| HSA (self-only) | $4,300 |
| HSA (family) | $8,550 |
The new super catch-up for ages 60–63 allows an extra $11,250 in 401k contributions — the largest catch-up in retirement account history.
The $7,000 IRA limit ($8,000 if 50+) stays the same for 2025. Roth IRA income phase-out thresholds increased by ~$4,000.
Limits run Jan 1–Dec 31. The IRS announces the next year's limits each October. This page will be updated in October 2025 for 2026.
Source: IRS Notice 2024-80. All figures are for 2025 tax year (Jan 1 – Dec 31, 2025). Always confirm with a tax professional before making contribution decisions.
Learn the Strategy Behind the Numbers
In-depth guides on every major retirement planning decision — each paired with the free calculator that runs your specific numbers.
How Much Do I Need to Retire? A Decade-by-Decade Framework
Build your real retirement number from actual spending — not someone else’s headline figure.
Read guide → Retirement AccountsRoth vs Traditional IRA: Which One Saves You More?
Tax now or tax later — the timing decision that can mean $200,000+ over a career.
Read guide → FIRE & Early RetirementHow to Calculate Your FIRE Number and Timeline
Turn “I want to retire early” into a specific number and a specific date.
Read guide → Social SecurityWhen to Claim Social Security: How to Find Your Break-Even Age
Claim at 62 or wait until 70? The $100,000+ lifetime decision, calculated correctly.
Read guide → Retirement StrategyThe 4% Rule: Does It Still Work for Retirement in 2026?
The rule that built the FIRE movement is under scrutiny. Here’s the honest answer and when to adjust your rate.
Read guide → Retirement Tax PlanningRequired Minimum Distributions: What They Are and How to Plan
The retirement tax bill most people don’t see coming — and the pre-RMD window to reduce it.
Read guide → Retirement PlanningPension vs Lump Sum: How to Run the Numbers and Decide
The biggest financial decision most retirees make only once — the break-even framework that gets it right.
Read guide → 401(k) Strategy401(k) Contribution Limits 2026: Max Out and What It’s Worth
The limits went up. Here’s what you can contribute, the tax savings, and what compounding turns it into over 30 years.
Read guide → 401(k) StrategyCatch-Up Contributions After 50: How Much Wealth They Build
The retirement savings accelerator most people over 50 underuse — including the SECURE 2.0 ages 60–63 super catch-up.
Read guide → Retirement PlanningThe Retirement Income Gap: What It Is and How to Close It
Your balance is only half the story. The gap between guaranteed income and what your lifestyle costs is what your plan must actually bridge.
Read guide → Retirement Accounts401(k) vs IRA vs Roth IRA: Which Account to Fill First
Same savings rate, smarter sequence — the contribution order that produces materially better lifetime outcomes.
Read guide → 401(k) StrategyHow Compound Interest Builds Your 401(k) Over 30 Years
You put in $210,000 over 35 years. The math put in $690,000. Here’s exactly how compounding builds retirement wealth.
Read guide →