In 2024, the Roth IRA contribution limit is $7,000. For those over the age of 50, there is an additional $1,000 catch-up contribution allowed bringing the total to $8,000.
The incredible tax benefit of a Roth IRA is that in exchange for foregoing a tax deduction on your contribution the account becomes tax free as long as the holding and age requirements are met.
This means that given the power of time and compounding your $7,000 contribution can grow to become a substantial sum of tax free money in the future.
A 22 year old college graduate who makes the commitment to max out their Roth IRA the year they graduate would see just that years contribution grow to over $383 thousand dollars by the time they reach 65.
Once you have built the habit of saving and investing it is much easier to continue doing so.
The same 22 year old from our earlier example could make the commitment to fully fund their Roth IRA every year and reach age 65 having accumulated over $3.7 million in tax free money.
If we were to assume they saved only this money for retirement, we can assume they’d be able to safely withdraw about $150 thousand per year using the 4% rule. If we assume they would receive another $50 thousand per year from Social Security that would give them a total of $200 thousand per year for spending.
How much could your $7,000 contribution be worth over time?
Years | Value |
5 | $11,273 |
10 | $18,156 |
20 | $47,092 |
30 | $122,145 |
40 | $316,814 |
42 | $383,345 |
What would the future value of funding your Roth IRA every year until retirement be worth?
Years of Maxing Roth IRA | Value |
5 | $42,735 |
10 | $111,561 |
20 | $400,925 |
30 | $1,151,458 |
40 | $3,098,147 |
42 | $3,763,458 |