DeCesare Retirement Specialists

Work to Wealth

Retirement Plan Contribution Limits for 2025

| Economic Update, Investments, Planning, Retirement, Work to Wealth

Our featured article of the month, Retirement Plan Contribution Limits for 2025, details changes in retirement additions based on your age as adjusted through the SECURE Act 2.0.  If you are between the ages of 60 and 63 then the “super catch-up” of up to $11,250 may be a consideration if you are looking to further defer savings into retirement vehicles.

Expanded access to plans will allow more employees access to contributions for a future retirement, above and beyond what is available through the IRA contribution limits. Also, for those 50+, the catch up limits remain the same but still offer a beneficial add on to your retirement savings strategy.

Are you in your early sixties and hoping to make a splash in your retirement strategy? The SECURE Act 2.0 introduced a $11,250 catch-up contribution for those aged 60-63.

This “super catch-up” is part of a new tiered catch-up contribution for workers participating in 401(k), 403(b), governmental 457 plans, and the federal government’s Thrift Savings Plan. This follows SECURE Act 2.0’s revised age for Required Minimum Distributions (RMD) and expanded access to 401(k) plans for part-time employees. With these higher contributions, you might be able to lower your taxable income.

The base annual contribution limit for these accounts has gone up to $23,500, up from $23,000 in recent years.1

For regular Individual Retirement Accounts (IRAs), the contribution limit remains unchanged at $7,000, with an additional $1,000 contribution available for those over age 50.1

For workplace retirement accounts, like the 401(k), the catch-up contribution for those over 50 remains the same at $7,500 for 2025.1

The higher contribution level supersedes the 50+ catch-up; unfortunately, you won’t be able to do both! The chart below outlines the 2025 limits.1

For my clients who participate in workplace plans, this offers an opportunity to reevaluate their contributions and potentially invest more money into their retirement strategy. If that sounds like a good idea to you, let’s have a conversation about this soon.


 

1. IRS, November 12, 2024