IRA Calculator
IRA Calculator
Estimate Roth IRA growth, Traditional IRA growth, contribution limits, taxes, and your retirement savings goal.
IRA Results
Contribution vs Growth
| Age | Year | Starting balance | Contribution | Estimated growth | Ending balance |
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Estimate Roth IRA growth, Traditional IRA growth, contribution limits, taxes, and your retirement savings goal.
| Age | Year | Starting balance | Contribution | Estimated growth | Ending balance |
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An IRA calculator is a retirement savings calculator that helps you estimate how much a Roth IRA or Traditional IRA could grow over time. This IRA growth calculator uses your current IRA balance, regular contributions, expected annual return, age, retirement age, and tax assumptions to estimate a future retirement balance.
This tool can be used as a Roth IRA calculator, Traditional IRA calculator, IRA contribution calculator, IRA retirement savings calculator, Roth vs Traditional IRA calculator, and IRA contribution limit calculator.
A Roth IRA generally uses after-tax contributions. Qualified Roth IRA withdrawals may be tax-free in retirement. A Traditional IRA may offer tax deductions now, but withdrawals are usually taxed as ordinary income later.
The better choice depends on your income, current tax rate, expected retirement tax rate, retirement plans, and eligibility. If you expect your retirement tax rate to be higher than your current tax rate, a Roth IRA may be helpful. If your current tax rate is higher than your expected retirement tax rate, a Traditional IRA may be helpful.
IRA contribution limits can change by tax year. Catch-up contributions may apply for people age 50 or older. This calculator stores contribution limits in clearly labeled JavaScript constants and also includes an editable contribution limit field so the page can be updated easily when IRS rules change.
Before making final contribution decisions, check the latest IRS rules or speak with a qualified financial or tax professional.
This retirement IRA calculator uses compound growth. Compound growth means your balance can earn investment returns, and those returns may also earn returns over time. The longer your money stays invested, the more important time and compounding can become.
When monthly contributions are selected, the calculator uses monthly compounding. When yearly contributions are selected, the calculator adds the yearly contribution once per year and applies annual growth.
Monthly IRA contributions may help build a steady savings habit. Regular investing can also help spread contributions across different market conditions. Yearly contributions may be useful for people who prefer to invest a lump sum once per year.
IRA returns are not guaranteed. Your actual return depends on investments such as stocks, bonds, mutual funds, ETFs, cash, and market performance. Many users test several return percentages to see conservative, moderate, and optimistic retirement savings estimates.
Example: a 30-year-old user plans to retire at 67, has a current IRA balance of $10,000, contributes $500 per month, and expects a 7% annual return. The calculator estimates the future IRA balance, total contributions, and investment growth through retirement.
This IRA calculator is for educational and estimation purposes only. It does not provide financial, tax, legal, or investment advice. IRA rules, contribution limits, tax deductions, and Roth IRA eligibility can change. Users should verify details with the IRS or a qualified financial, tax, or investment professional.
An IRA calculator estimates how much your Roth IRA or Traditional IRA may grow by retirement based on your balance, contributions, expected return, and time horizon.
It uses compound growth logic, regular contributions, tax rate assumptions, IRA contribution limits, and Roth IRA eligibility estimates.
A Roth IRA uses after-tax contributions and qualified withdrawals may be tax-free. A Traditional IRA may offer tax deductions, but withdrawals are usually taxed as income.
It depends on your income, tax rates, retirement plans, and eligibility. Roth may help if you expect higher taxes later. Traditional may help if your current tax rate is higher.
IRA contribution limits can change by year, and catch-up contributions may apply at age 50 or older. Always check the latest IRS rules.
Yes. Many people make monthly IRA contributions to build a consistent savings habit.
Yes. It estimates investment growth using your expected annual return and the selected contribution frequency.
It includes a simple Traditional IRA tax savings estimate and after-tax Traditional IRA retirement value estimate. It is not a full tax calculation.
Excess IRA contributions may cause tax penalties. Contact the IRS or a qualified tax professional if you overcontribute.
Yes, but your total combined contributions across IRAs are generally subject to the annual IRA contribution limit.
Many people can contribute to an IRA even if they have a 401(k), but deductibility and Roth IRA eligibility may depend on income and filing status.
You can test different rates. Returns are not guaranteed and depend on your investments and market performance.
Yes. This calculator is designed for people in the United States estimating Roth IRA and Traditional IRA savings.
Traditional IRA withdrawals are usually taxed as income. Qualified Roth IRA withdrawals may be tax-free.