US Pension Annual Allowance Calculator
Calculate maximum contribution limits for retirement plans in 2025
Table of Contents
What is the Annual Allowance?
The annual allowance is the maximum total amount that can be contributed to your retirement accounts in a single calendar year. This includes employee deferrals, employer contributions, matching contributions, and profit-sharing allocations. Understanding your annual allowance helps you maximize retirement savings without exceeding IRS limits and avoiding costly penalties.
Calculate Your Limits
Your Pension Annual Allowance Results
Important Reminders
Contribution Formulas & Methodology
401(k) Plan Calculation
Maximum = $23,500 (under age 50)
Maximum = $23,500 + $7,500 catch-up = $31,000 (ages 50–59, 64+)
Maximum = $23,500 + $11,250 catch-up = $34,750 (ages 60–63)
Annual Addition Limit:
Total Annual Addition = Lesser of:
• 100% of Annual Compensation, or
• $70,000 (2025)
Formula: Employee Deferral + Employer Match + Profit Sharing ≤ $70,000 or 100% of compensation
Traditional IRA Calculation
Maximum = $7,000 (under age 50)
Maximum = $7,000 + $1,000 catch-up = $8,000 (age 50+)
Constraint: Cannot exceed earned income for the tax year
Formula: IRA Contribution ≤ Lesser of ($7,000 or $8,000 if 50+) and earned income
SIMPLE IRA Calculation
Maximum = $16,500 (under age 50)
Maximum = $16,500 + $3,500 catch-up = $20,000 (age 50+)
Employer Contribution (Required):
• Matching Contribution = Employee Deferral × Match % (up to 3%)
• OR Non-Elective = 2% of all eligible employee compensation
Formula: Employee Deferral + Employer Contribution ≤ $70,000 or 100% of compensation
SEP IRA Calculation
SEP-IRA Contribution = Net Self-Employment Income × 20%*
Maximum = $70,000 (2025) or 100% of compensation
*20% represents approximately 25% employer contribution rate less self-employment tax deduction
Formula: Net SE Income × 0.20 = Maximum SEP-IRA contribution (capped at $70,000)
Solo 401(k) Calculation
Employee Deferral = Up to $23,500 (2025)
Plus Catch-up = Up to $7,500 or $11,250 (ages 60–63)
Employer Contribution:
Employer Contribution = Net SE Income × 20%*
Total Combined:
Total = Employee Deferral + Employer Contribution ≤ $70,000 or 100% of net SE income
Formula: Employee Deferral + (Net SE Income × 20%) ≤ $70,000 or 100% compensation
Defined Benefit Plan Calculation
Maximum = Lesser of:
• 100% of highest 3-year average compensation, or
• $280,000 (2025)
Annual Funding Contribution:
Required Contribution = Actuarially determined based on:
• Promised annual benefit
• Years of service
• Investment returns
• Mortality rates
Formula: Actuarially determined annual funding ≤ Amount needed to fund maximum benefit of $280,000
Annual Additions Limit (Applies to All Plans)
Total Annual Additions = Lesser of:
• 100% of Annual Compensation, or
• $70,000
Includes:
• Employee deferrals
• Employer contributions
• Employer matches
• Profit-sharing allocations
• Forfeitures
Excludes:
• Catch-up contributions (if plan allows)
• Loan repayments
• Contributions made due to plan errors
Retirement Plan Types & Limits
401(k) Plan Details
Employee Deferral Limit (2025): $23,500
Catch-up Contribution (Ages 50+): $7,500 (total $31,000)
Extended Catch-up (Ages 60-63): $11,250 (total $34,750)
Combined Annual Limit: $70,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is less)
Includes: Employee deferrals + employer match + profit sharing
Who Can Participate: Employees of companies offering 401(k) plans
Key Advantage: High contribution limits and potential employer matching
403(b) Plan Details
Employee Deferral Limit (2025): $23,500
Catch-up Contribution (Ages 50+): $7,500 (total $31,000)
Extended Catch-up (Ages 60-63): $11,250 (total $34,750)
15-Year Service Catch-up: Up to $15,000 (lifetime cap)
Combined Annual Limit: $70,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is less)
Who Can Participate: Employees of schools, colleges, hospitals, nonprofits, and clergy
Key Advantage: Similar to 401(k) but available to specific employers
Traditional IRA Details
Annual Contribution Limit (2025): $7,000
Catch-up Contribution (Ages 50+): $1,000 (total $8,000)
Combined Annual Limit: $70,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is less)
Constraint: Cannot exceed earned income for the tax year
Who Can Participate: Anyone with earned income
Key Advantages: Tax-deductible contributions, simplicity, wide availability
Income Limits: Deductibility phases out if covered by employer plan and earn over threshold ($77,500 single, $123,000 married filing jointly in 2025)
SIMPLE IRA Details
Employee Deferral Limit (2025): $16,500
Catch-up Contribution (Ages 50+): $3,500 (total $20,000)
Employer Contribution (Required): 2-3% of compensation
Combined Annual Limit: $70,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is less)
Who Can Participate: Businesses with 100 or fewer employees
Key Advantages: Lower compliance costs, easier than 401(k)
Requirement: Employer must contribute matching contributions or 2% non-elective contribution
SEP IRA Details
Maximum Annual Contribution (2025): $70,000 or 25% of net self-employment income
Formula: Net SE Income × 20% (approximately 25% less self-employment tax deduction)
Who Can Participate: Self-employed individuals, freelancers, small business owners
Key Advantages: Highest contribution limits, simplicity, no annual compliance testing
Flexibility: Can contribute 0% if business income is down some years
Employees: If employees exist, employer must contribute same percentage for all eligible employees
Defined Benefit Plan Details
Maximum Annual Benefit (2025): $280,000 or 100% of highest 3-year average
Annual Funding Contribution: Actuarially determined based on promised benefit
Who Can Participate: Self-employed individuals, small business owners wanting higher contributions
Key Advantages: Highest contribution potential, guarantees specific retirement income
Requirements: Requires annual actuarial calculations and plan administration
Best For: Established businesses with stable, predictable income
2025 Contribution Limits Summary
| Plan Type | Under Age 50 | Age 50-59 / 64+ | Age 60-63 | Combined Limit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 401(k) | $23,500 | $31,000 | $34,750 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| 403(b) | $23,500 | $31,000 | $34,750 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| 457(b) | $23,500 | $31,000 | $34,750 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| Traditional IRA | $7,000 | $8,000 | $8,000 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| Roth IRA | $7,000 | $8,000 | $8,000 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| SIMPLE IRA | $16,500 | $20,000 | $20,000 | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| SEP IRA | 25% of net SE income (approx. 20%) | $70,000 max | ||
| Solo 401(k) | $23,500 + 20% SE income | $31,000 + 20% SE income | $34,750 + 20% SE income | $70,000 or 100% comp |
| Defined Benefit | Actuarially determined | $280,000 annual benefit | ||
Key IRS Limits (2025)
| Limit Type | 2025 Amount | 2024 Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Compensation Limit | $350,000 | $345,000 |
| Annual Additions Limit (DC Plans) | $70,000 | $69,000 |
| Defined Benefit Maximum | $280,000 | $275,000 |
| HCE Determination Threshold | $160,000 | $155,000 |
| Social Security Wage Base | $176,100 | $168,600 |