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Retirement Calculators
Enter your details and get a personalized breakdown in seconds. All calculations use the latest 2026 IRS figures and run entirely in your browser.
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Contribution limits, tax treatment, income restrictions, and withdrawal rules — all compared side by side.
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Retirement Planning Guides
Plain-English explanations of how retirement accounts work — no jargon, no sales pitch.
FAQ
Common questions about 2026 retirement limits
Data sourced directly from IRS.gov and SSA.gov. Updated November 2025.
What is the 401(k) contribution limit for 2026?
The employee contribution limit is $24,500. Workers aged 50+ can add a $8,000 catch-up contribution ($32,500 total). Workers aged 60–63 qualify for a super catch-up of $11,250 ($35,750 total) — a new rule under SECURE 2.0. Use the calculator →
What is the Roth IRA income limit for 2026?
Single filers can contribute fully below $153,000 MAGI, phasing out at $168,000. Married filing jointly: full contribution below $242,000, phasing out at $252,000. Above the limit, a backdoor Roth may still be an option. Check your eligibility →
What is the IRA contribution limit for 2026?
The combined limit for Traditional and Roth IRA is $7,500. Ages 50+ can contribute an extra $1,100 catch-up, for a total of $8,600. This is a combined limit — contributing $7,500 to a Roth IRA means $0 available for a Traditional IRA.
What is the HSA contribution limit for 2026?
Self-only HDHP coverage: $4,400. Family coverage: $8,750. Ages 55+ can contribute an additional $1,000. You must be enrolled in a qualifying HDHP and not enrolled in Medicare to contribute. Calculate your HSA limit →