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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.

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10 Free Retirement Calculators

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401k Growth Calculator
Benchmark figures
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How it works

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.

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FAQ

Retirement Planning Questions Answered

Straight answers to the retirement questions people search for most.

The most common rule of thumb is 25× your expected annual spending in retirement, derived from the 4% safe withdrawal rate. If you plan to spend $60,000/year, you need a $1.5 million portfolio. This doesn't account for Social Security or pension income — use the Retirement Savings Goal Calculator above with your actual numbers for a personalised target.
The 4% rule means you can withdraw 4% of your savings in your first year of retirement, then increase that amount with inflation each year — and historically the money has lasted 30 years or more. For retirements longer than 30 years, many planners recommend 3–3.5%. Use the Withdrawal Rate Calculator to stress-test your portfolio at different withdrawal rates.
Fidelity benchmarks: 1× salary by 30, 3× by 40, 6× by 50, 8× by 60, 10× by 67. On a $75,000 salary: $75k at 30, $225k at 40, $450k at 50. These are rough guides — use the 401k Growth Calculator to project your personal balance and see whether you are on track.
Traditional IRA: contributions are pre-tax (tax deduction now), but all withdrawals in retirement are taxed as ordinary income. Roth IRA: contributions are after-tax (no deduction now), but qualified withdrawals are 100% tax-free. Roth wins if your tax rate rises in retirement; Traditional wins if it falls. 2025 limit: $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+). Use the Roth vs Traditional IRA Calculator to compare.
You can claim at 62 (reduced up to 30%), at Full Retirement Age 67 (born 1960+), or delay to 70 for 8%/year in credits. Waiting from 62 to 70 increases your benefit by ~77%. Break-even age is typically 80–82. Use the Social Security Estimate Calculator for your personal break-even.
FIRE means aggressively saving to retire far before traditional retirement age. Your FIRE number = 25× annual expenses. Coast FIRE is the portfolio size at which you can stop contributing and let savings compound to your FIRE number by a target retirement age without further contributions. Use the FIRE Number Calculator for both figures.
Starting at age 73 (SECURE 2.0), the IRS requires minimum annual withdrawals from traditional IRAs and 401(k)s. Amount = prior year-end balance ÷ IRS life expectancy factor (e.g., 26.5 at age 73). Failure to take your RMD results in a 25% excise tax on the shortfall. Use the RMD Calculator to project your requirements.
Monthly payments provide guaranteed lifetime income; a lump sum gives flexibility and potential for higher returns. Key metric: break-even age — how old you need to be for cumulative pension payments to exceed the invested lump sum. Use the Pension vs Lump Sum Calculator to find your personal break-even age.
Employee limit: $23,500. Age 50–59 & 64+: $7,500 catch-up = $31,000 total. Age 60–63 super catch-up (SECURE 2.0): $11,250 extra = $34,750 total. IRA limit: $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+). Total with employer contributions: $70,000. Use the Catch-Up Contribution Calculator to see the impact.
At 3% inflation, $60,000 of today's spending requires $108,500 in 20 years and $145,000 in 30 years to maintain purchasing power. Both the Withdrawal Rate and Savings Goal calculators include inflation inputs so your projections account for this erosion.
Coast FIRE is the portfolio amount at which you can stop contributing and let savings compound — without adding more — to your full FIRE number by a target retirement age. Formula: Coast FIRE = FIRE Number ÷ (1 + r)^years. At 7% real returns, $200,000 at age 35 coasts to ~$1.07M by 65. Use the FIRE Number Calculator.
Maxing 401k ($31,000/yr age 50+) plus IRA ($8,000/yr) for 17 years at 7% generates approximately $1.07 million by age 67 from zero. Key: max catch-up contributions, delay Social Security to 70, consider working a few extra years — each year dramatically reduces the portfolio needed. Use the Catch-Up Contribution Calculator.
The most impactful strategy is converting money from a Traditional IRA to a Roth IRA in the years before age 73, when forced withdrawals begin — you lock in today's lower rate on decades of future growth. Before claiming Social Security, draw down tax-deferred accounts first to keep your income — and tax bracket — lower. Once you're 70½ or older, donating directly from your IRA to charity counts as your required withdrawal without adding to taxable income. Use the Retirement Income Tax Calculator above to model your specific income mix.
A common benchmark is 15% of your gross income, including any employer match. On a $75,000 salary that's roughly $937/month — about $562 from you plus a 4% employer match of $250. If you're starting later than 25, aim for 20% or more to compensate for fewer compounding years. Use the 401k Growth Calculator above to project your balance at retirement based on your actual contribution rate.
Yes — retiring at 60 is achievable, but requires a larger nest egg than retiring at 67, for two reasons: more years of retirement to fund, and a 7-year wait before Medicare (65) and full Social Security (67). Using the 4% rule, you'd need approximately 25× your annual spending before Social Security begins. You can also access 401k funds penalty-free at 59½. Use the Retirement Savings Goal Calculator to find your exact target.
A long-term average of 7% annually (after inflation) is the most widely cited benchmark for a diversified 401k. The S&P 500 has historically returned about 10% before inflation — subtract roughly 3% for inflation and you get 7% in real terms. Use the 401k Growth Calculator above with 5%, 7%, and 9% to see the range of outcomes for your balance.
According to Vanguard's How America Saves 2024 report — covering 5 million+ 401k accounts — the overall average balance is $134,128. However, the median is only $35,286. The median is the better benchmark: half of Americans have more, half have less. In the 55–64 group, the average is $244,750 but the median is $87,571 — less than 36%. See the full breakdown by age group in the reference table below.
Not necessarily — especially in the early and mid stages of planning. The core numbers (how much to save, when to claim Social Security, whether Roth or Traditional wins for your bracket) can be calculated accurately with free tools like the ones on this page. A financial advisor adds the most value for complex situations: pension decisions, estate planning, tax optimisation across multiple account types, or significant assets. Use these calculators to understand your numbers first — then any advisor conversation will be faster and more focused.

Now that you know the plan — here's how your savings stack up against other Americans your age.

Reference Data · Vanguard 2024 Report

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.

$134,128
Overall average balance across all ages
$35,286
Overall median — what the typical saver has
73%
Below average — the median reveals the true gap

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
Average balance bar Median balance (% of average) Source: Vanguard How America Saves 2024 · 5M+ accounts · 2023 plan year data

📊 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.

Reference Data · IRS 2025

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

Provision2025 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

Provision2025 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 Type2025 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
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Biggest 2025 Change

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.

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IRA Limit Unchanged

The $7,000 IRA limit ($8,000 if 50+) stays the same for 2025. Roth IRA income phase-out thresholds increased by ~$4,000.

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When Limits Reset

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.

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