Complete US Retirement Savings Guide🇺🇸 United States • 2026 Limits

Everything you need to know about 401(k), Roth IRA, Social Security, and building a retirement plan in the United States. Updated with 2026 contribution limits and SECURE 2.0 rules.

1. Why Start Saving for Retirement Now?

Time is the most powerful factor in retirement savings. Thanks to compound growth, starting early makes a dramatic difference:

Example: If you invest $500/month starting at age 25 with 7% annual returns, you'll have about $1.2 million by age 65. Start at 35 and you'll have only $567,000 — half as much, despite only 10 fewer years.

Every dollar you invest today works for decades. Tax-advantaged accounts like 401(k) and IRA supercharge this growth by deferring or eliminating taxes.

2. Your 401(k) — The Foundation

A 401(k) is an employer-sponsored retirement savings plan. It's the cornerstone of retirement planning in the US because of generous contribution limits and employer matching.

How It Works

  1. You contribute a percentage of each paycheck (pre-tax for Traditional, after-tax for Roth).
  2. Your employer matches a portion of your contributions — this is free money.
  3. Investments grow tax-deferred (Traditional) or tax-free (Roth) inside the account.
  4. You withdraw in retirement (after age 59½). Early withdrawal triggers a 10% penalty.

2026 Contribution Limits

Category2026 LimitNotes
Employee contribution$23,500Under age 50
Catch-up (age 50+)$7,500 extraTotal: $31,000
Super catch-up (ages 60-63)$11,250 extraTotal: $34,750 (SECURE 2.0)
Employer + Employee total$70,000Includes employer match

Employer Match — Never Leave Free Money Behind

A typical employer match is 50% of your contributions up to 6% of salary. If you earn $80,000 and contribute 6% ($4,800), your employer adds $2,400. That's an instant 50% return on your money.

Rule #1: Always contribute at least enough to get the full employer match. Anything less is leaving free money on the table.

Calculate Your 401(k) Growth →

3. Roth vs Traditional — Which Is Better?

This is the most common retirement planning question. The answer depends on your current vs future tax bracket:

FeatureTraditional 401(k)/IRARoth 401(k)/IRA
Tax on contributionsPre-tax (reduces taxable income now)After-tax (no upfront tax break)
Tax on growthTax-deferredTax-free
Tax on withdrawalsTaxed as ordinary incomeTax-free (if qualified)
RMDs at 73Yes — Required Minimum DistributionsNo (Roth 401k: yes, Roth IRA: no)
Best whenIn a high bracket now, lower in retirementIn a lower bracket now, higher later

General Guidelines

Pro tip: If unsure, do both! Many employers offer both Traditional and Roth 401(k). Splitting contributions hedges against future tax rate uncertainty.

4. IRA Options — Beyond Your 401(k)

Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs) supplement your 401(k). You can contribute to an IRA even if you have a 401(k), subject to income limits.

2026 IRA Limits

TypeAnnual LimitCatch-up (50+)Income Limit (Single)
Roth IRA$7,000$1,000 extra$150,000 – $165,000 phase-out
Traditional IRA$7,000$1,000 extraDeductibility limited if employer plan

Roth IRA — Tax-Free Growth Forever

The Roth IRA is one of the best retirement tools available. Contributions are after-tax, but all growth and withdrawals are completely tax-free. Unlike the Roth 401(k), there are no Required Minimum Distributions.

If your income exceeds the Roth IRA limit, you can use a Backdoor Roth strategy: contribute to a Traditional IRA, then convert to Roth.

Calculate Roth IRA Growth →

5. Social Security — What to Expect

Social Security provides a guaranteed income floor in retirement, but it's designed to replace only about 40% of pre-retirement income for average earners. Think of it as a supplement, not a complete plan.

Key Facts for 2025

When to Claim

Estimate Your Social Security →

6. SECURE 2.0 Act — What Changed

The SECURE 2.0 Act (2022) introduced major retirement savings improvements that are now fully in effect:

7. 2026 Contribution Limits at a Glance

AccountUnder 50Age 50+Ages 60-63
401(k) / 403(b)$23,500$31,000$34,750
Traditional IRA$7,000$8,000$8,000
Roth IRA$7,000$8,000$8,000
HSA (Self-only)$4,300$5,300$5,300
HSA (Family)$8,550$9,550$9,550

Source: IRS Revenue Procedure 2025-32, SECURE 2.0 Act provisions.

8. Retirement Strategy by Age

20s – Start Strong

30s – Accelerate

40s – Catch Up

50s – Final Push

Plan Your Retirement → Estimate Social Security →

9. Five Costly Retirement Mistakes

  1. Not getting the full employer match — This is a guaranteed 50-100% return. Always get 100% of the match.
  2. Cashing out when changing jobs — You'll pay taxes + 10% penalty. Always roll over to your new 401(k) or an IRA.
  3. Being too conservative too early — In your 20s-30s, you can afford volatility. Don't keep retirement money in bonds or cash.
  4. Ignoring fees — A 1% higher expense ratio can cost $100,000+ over 30 years. Choose low-cost index funds.
  5. Not having a plan — Use our calculators to set a target number and track progress annually.

401(k) Calculator → Roth IRA Calculator →