Is Your 401(k) at 60 Enough for Retirement?
Quick Learning
-
The average 60-year-old holds $246,500 in a 401(k), well below Fidelity’s target salary of 8x, making all the avoided tax losses very expensive.
-
Workers ages 60 to 63 can contribute $35,750 to a 401(k) by 2026, the highest limit available for any age group under current law.
-
Social Security delays past full retirement age add 8% per year until age 70, and each COLA increase is then compounded into a larger base forever.
-
Are you ahead, or behind in retirement? SmartAsset’s free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor is carefully vetted, and must act in your best interest. Don’t waste another minute; read more here.
The five years between the ages of 60 and 60 hold an extraordinary amount of income tax. Contribution limits are changing, Roth conversion windows are opening, Social Security term decisions are tightening, and the first previews of required minimum distributions are starting to take shape. Each lever pulled or crossed during this expansion echoes for decades, often silently, in the size of every check, withdrawal, and subsequent tax bill. The data below outlines what the average pre-retirement average works out to be and which decisions carry the most weight.
That’s what a 60-year-old man does
The starting point is important because it shapes what instruments are available. Fidelity’s most recent retirement analysis puts the 401(k) balance at $246,500 for the 60 to 64 age bracket, rising slightly to $251,400 for the 65 to 69 age bracket. $720,000. If the balance is modest, every dollar lost in avoidable taxes is a dollar not spent in retirement.
Read: Are you ahead, or behind in retirement? SmartAsset’s free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor is carefully vetted, and must act in your best interest. Don’t waste another minute; read more here.
The pressure to spend has also not eased. The Bureau of Labor Statistics puts average annual household spending at $78,535 in 2024, and the personal savings rate has dropped from 6.2% in early 2024 to 3.9% in the first quarter of 2026. Fixed income strategies designed at age 60 should withstand that erosion.
Lever One: super catch up from 60 to 63
The 2026 401(k) limit is $24,500 for workers under 50 and $32,500 for those 50 and older. In the younger window, ages 60 to 63, the limit jumps to $35,750. An employee in the state’s 22% bracket (single filers with taxable income between $48,476 and $103,350 in 2025) using gross withholding saves several thousand dollars on the current year’s tax bill while moving the money to a tax-free account. The IRA limit rises to $7,500 in 2026, with a $1,100 deduction for those age 50 and older. Under SECURE 2.0, workers earning $150,000 or more in FICA wages must roll over deductions to a Roth 401(k) starting in 2026, which shifts the math from deductions today to tax-free income later.

