If you have ever stared at your statement and asked how much should I have in my 401k by age, you are asking the right question at the right time. There is no single correct number, but there are useful benchmarks — usually expressed as a multiple of your salary — that tell you whether you are roughly on track or drifting behind. This 2026 guide walks through those targets, what the "average" balance actually hides, and what to do if the number scares you.
What changed in 2026
A few moving parts matter this year. Contribution limits tend to rise with inflation, so the maximum you can defer into a 401k in 2026 is higher than a couple of years ago — check the current IRS figure before you set your payroll percentage, because it changes annually. The SECURE 2.0 rules also expanded catch-up contributions: savers age 50 and up can add extra, and there is now a larger "super catch-up" window for people roughly in their early 60s. Higher earners may be required to make certain catch-up contributions on a Roth (after-tax) basis. None of this changes the core math, but it does change how much room you have to accelerate.
The salary-multiple rule of thumb
The most quoted framework comes from large plan providers and expresses your target as a multiple of your current salary. Treat these as directional guardrails, not gospel — your real number depends on your spending, other income, and planned retirement age.
| Age |
Rough target (x salary) |
What it signals |
| 30 |
~1x |
You started early and captured your match |
| 40 |
~3x |
Compounding is doing real work now |
| 50 |
~6x |
Catch-up contributions start to matter |
| 60 |
~8x |
You can model a realistic retirement date |
| 67 |
~10x |
Roughly on track for a traditional retirement |
So someone earning $80,000 might aim for about $80,000 by age 30 and roughly $240,000 by 40. Verify the current multiples with your own plan provider — several firms publish slightly different numbers.
What the average balance hides
It is tempting to search the average 401k balance by age and compare yourself to it. Be careful: averages are dragged upward by a small number of very large accounts, so the median is almost always much lower and more representative. Averages also ignore money in old employer plans, IRAs, a spouse's accounts, pensions, and taxable brokerage savings. Your 401k is one bucket, not your whole retirement. Judge yourself against your total invested net worth and your own target, not a headline number that lumps 25-year-olds and 64-year-olds together.
If you are behind, here is the catch-up math
Falling short of the multiple for your age is common and fixable — time and contribution rate matter far more than picking hot funds.
- Grab the full employer match first. It is an immediate return you cannot get anywhere else.
- Raise your contribution rate by one percentage point each year, ideally timed to a raise so you barely feel it.
- Use age-based catch-up contributions once you qualify; the extra room in your early 60s is meaningful.
- Keep fees low. A broad index fund inside the plan usually beats an expensive advisor-managed or high-fee option.
A 40-something who is behind but saves aggressively for 20 years can still land near the target, because most of a final balance comes from growth in the last stretch, not the first.
What to skip
Skip cashing out or "temporarily" borrowing from your 401k when you change jobs — the taxes, penalties, and lost compounding usually dwarf the short-term convenience, so roll it over instead. Also skip obsessing over hitting an exact multiple on your birthday. These benchmarks are smoothing tools, not deadlines, and market swings can move your balance more in a single quarter than a full year of contributions.
FAQ
How much should I have in my 401k by 30?
A common target is roughly one year of salary across all retirement accounts by age 30, but even a fraction of that is fine if you are contributing consistently and capturing the match.
Do these targets include employer contributions?
Yes. The salary-multiple benchmarks count everything in the account — your contributions, the employer match, and growth. Some frameworks also fold in IRA balances.
What if I started late?
Focus on your contribution rate, not the gap. Catch-up contributions, a couple of extra working years, and low fees can close a surprising amount of ground.
Is a 401k enough on its own?
Often not by itself. Many people pair it with an IRA or a taxable account for more investment choice and added flexibility.
Where to go next
Once your 401k is on track, look at rounding out your tax buckets and strategy. If you are a higher earner shut out of a Roth, read our guide to the backdoor Roth IRA. To think through how you actually invest the balance, see AI investing strategies. And if you are closer to retirement and weighing guaranteed income, our breakdown of annuities explained covers the tradeoffs honestly.