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The catch-up contribution limit, for those 50 or older, is holding steady at $7,500. There’s an extra layer of icing for workers aged 60 to 63, thanks to the Secure 2.0 law — a higher catch-up ...
The IRS recently announced a much higher catch-up allowance when contributing towards employer retirement plans, including 401(k)s. This amount is almost double the “regular” catch-up ...
As part of SECURE Act 2.0, passed in late 2022, individuals age 60, 61, 62 or 63 are now allowed to make “super catch-up contributions” to their 401(k) and other retirement plans. These ...
In 2025, the catch-up contribution limit for 401(k)s is $7,500, unchanged from 2024. So if you're 50 or older by the end of 2025, you can put up to $31,000 into your 401(k). IRA limits for 2025
The law ushered in a new rule that provides extra catch-up contributions for employees aged 60 to 63. Those older workers can make additional 401(k) contributions of $11,250 in 2025 instead for a ...
This extra boost is called a catch-up contribution. For employees aged 50 and older with a 401(k), the catch-up contribution limit will stay at $7,500 in 2025, the same as in 2024.
Additional matching contributions are made dollar-per-dollar up to 3% of base pay (e.g. an employee contributing 3% will have 1% automatically contributed plus 3% matched, for a total of 4%), then at $0.50/$1 for each additional dollar up to 5% of base pay; neither amounts above 5% nor "catch-up" contributions are matched, regardless of an ...
Larger catch-up contributions for older savers. If you're self-employed or work for a small business that offers SIMPLE IRA accounts to employees, the catch-up contribution rules are changing in 2025.