How much free money are you walking past?
If your employer offers a 401(k) match and you contribute less than the cap, you're leaving part of your compensation on the table. Punch in your numbers — see what the gap costs over a decade.
Estimates only. Annual contributions spread evenly across 12 months, monthly compounding, constant return, salary held flat. Real plans vest, cap differently, and markets vary. Your plan documents are the source of truth.
The match is part of your pay.
When a job offer says "401(k) with 100% match up to 6%," they're saying: contribute 6% of your salary and the company will add another 6%. If you only contribute 3%, the company only adds 3%. Half of the match disappears — not into a savings account, not into your paycheck. It just doesn't get earned.
A "100% match up to 6%" means: your employer matches every dollar you put in, dollar for dollar, until your contribution hits 6% of your salary. Past 6%, you're on your own.
Three you'll actually see.
Match formulas vary by employer. The three patterns below cover most plans. To find yours, look at your benefits portal or plan summary — it'll be phrased something like "100% of the first 4% and 50% of the next 2%."
- 100% up to 6%. Set match rate to
100and cap to6. Generous; common at larger employers. - 50% up to 6%. Set match rate to
50and cap to6. You'd need to contribute 6% to get a 3%-of-salary match. - 100% up to 3%, then 50% up to 5%. "Tiered" formulas can't be modeled with one slider. Approximate by entering the cap (5%) and a blended rate (~80%) — or check your plan documents for the exact figure.
Where this estimate is rough.
- Vesting. Some plans require you to stay X years before the match is fully yours. The calculator assumes you stay long enough to vest.
- Contribution timing. Real matches are deposited per paycheck; the projection assumes year-end for simplicity. The difference over a decade is small.
- Returns vary. 7% is a common long-run assumption for diversified equities. Real returns are bumpy. The projection shows trajectory, not promise.
- IRS limits. If you're a high earner, the IRS contribution and compensation caps may bind before the match cap does. See the 401(k) guide.