401(k) Calculator for a $75,000 Salary
See how much someone earning $75,000 a year could accumulate in a 401(k) by retirement, at different contribution rates. Adjust the inputs to match your situation.
Projected at retirement
- Your contributions (lifetime)$214,089
- Employer match (lifetime)$107,045
- Investment growth$749,764
- You contribute (year 1)$4,500
- Employer adds (year 1)$2,250
- Years to retirement30
Figures current for 2026 · last reviewed June 2026 · sourced from the IRS (IRS Notice 2025-67). How we calculate & cite our data. Educational only — not financial advice.
Assumptions & notes
How is the projection calculated?
What return should I use?
What does "today's dollars" mean?
Does it include taxes?
How to use the 401(k) calculator
Your 401(k) is likely the single biggest piece of your retirement. This calculator turns four simple inputs - your salary, contribution percentage, employer match and an expected return - into a projected balance at retirement, broken down into the three forces that build it: the money you put in, the match your employer adds, and the compound growth on top.
The single most important move for most people is contributing at least enough to capture the full employer match - it is an immediate, guaranteed return that no market can match. Our employer match optimizer shows exactly what you may be leaving on the table.
The power of starting early
Because growth compounds, the years matter more than the dollars. A 25-year-old contributing modestly often ends up ahead of a 40-year-old contributing far more, simply because the early money has decades to grow. Try changing the "current age" slider to see how dramatically the final balance shifts.
2026 contribution limits
For 2026 you can defer up to $24,500 from your paycheck into a 401(k). If you are 50 or older you can add a $8,000 catch-up, and savers aged 60-63 get an even larger $11,250 "super catch-up." See the full contribution-limits page for details and the new Roth catch-up rule.