SIMPLE IRA Max-Out Growth Calculator 2025 — Project $16,500/yr to Retirement

See what maxing out your SIMPLE IRA at the real 2025 IRS limit ($16,500, plus age catch-ups) grows to by retirement. Runs in your browser.

Free SIMPLE IRA max-out growth calculator for 2025. Enter your age, retirement age and expected return to see what contributing the IRS maximum of $16,500 (+$3,500 catch-up at age 50+, +$5,250 super catch-up at ages 60–63) every year compounds to — with a year-by-year balance table and the catch-up limits applied automatically as you age. Nominal pre-tax projection; runs entirely in your browser, nothing sent to any server. It runs free in your browser on Gera Tools, with nothing uploaded.

Last updated Source: Gera Tools

What is the 2025 SIMPLE IRA contribution limit?

For 2025 the SIMPLE IRA limit is $16,500. If you are 50 or older you can add a $3,500 catch-up, and if you are 60, 61, 62 or 63 a higher $5,250 super catch-up applies instead. This calculator applies the right cap automatically for each year of the projection.

SIMPLE IRA Max-Out Growth Calculator 2025

Two questions decide your retirement number: how much you put in and how long it compounds. Most calculators do one or the other. This one does both — it caps each year’s contribution at the real 2025 IRS limit for a SIMPLE IRA and then compounds it to your retirement age.

For 2025 the SIMPLE IRA limit is $16,500 (+$3,500 catch-up at age 50+, +$5,250 super catch-up at ages 60–63). The age-50 catch-up and the SECURE 2.0 age-60–63 super catch-up are applied automatically in the years you qualify — the tool raises and lowers your cap as you cross each age band, so a multi-decade projection stays accurate.

Enter your current age, target retirement age, starting balance and expected annual return. Tick “contribute the IRS maximum every year” to see the ceiling, or untick it to model your own amount (it is still clamped to the legal limit). Everything runs in your browser — no figures are transmitted.

2025 limits used: SIMPLE IRA $16,500 (+$3,500 catch-up at age 50+, +$5,250 super catch-up at ages 60–63). Source: IRS Notice 2024-80 + IRS Newsroom IR-2024-285, verified 2026-06-17. Always confirm the current year’s figure at irs.gov.