This Is the Average 401(k) Balance for Retirees and It's Not Enough

Source The Motley Fool

You know how much you have saved up in your 401(k) account. But how much does everyone else have? Mutual fund giant and retirement plan administrator Fidelity offers up this very information. Here are the average 401(k) balances for every age group participating in its plans as of the end of last year.

Generation Average 401(k) Balance
Generation Z $17,900
Millennials $83,700
Generation X $222,100
Baby boomers $270,800

Data source: Fidelity Q4 2025 "Building Financial Futures" report.

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These average balances, however, don't tell the most important part of the story. Far more important is the amount of retirement income this amount of savings is capable of producing. Using a common rule of thumb known as the 4% rule, the table below tells you how much monthly income you could reliably withdraw from an account with the assets in the table above.

Generation Typical Monthly Income From Current 401(k) Balance
Generation Z $59.66
Millennials $279.00
Generation X $740.33
Baby boomers $902.66

Calculations by author.

Obviously Gen Z, millennials, and most of Generation X are still working, and therefore still adding to their 401(k) balances rather than subtracting from them.

Baby boomers, on the other hand, are largely retired, and likely not contributing to a retirement plan; what they've got is what they're stuck with. And for most of them, it's clearly not enough to provide the sort of retirement they'd prefer. Even adding this year's average monthly Social Security payment of $2,071 doesn't dramatically upgrade anyone's lifestyle (although it certainly doesn't hurt).

Helpful options for anyone with retirement on the horizon

There's good news for anyone who's not yet retired. That is, you've got time and ways to save significantly more than these averages. At the very least, securing the maximum 401(k) matching contribution offered by your employer is the easiest way to start tucking away more money. But simply investing your retirement savings in more productive assets -- like stocks, rather than bonds -- is an important move to make as well, particularly if you've got several more years before you're thinking about retiring.

Even if you don't have a ton of time before you leave the world of work, however, you've got options.

An older investor appears stressed out while sitting in front of a laptop.

Image source: Getty Images.

The IRS currently allows for what are called catch-up contributions, raising the limit on how much money older workers can contribute to a 401(k) or ordinary IRA. For this year, in addition to the $24,500 contribution cap that applies to everyone, anyone between the ages of 50 and 59 as well as anyone over the age of 64 can contribute an extra $8,000 to a 401(k) plan. And for anyone between the ages of 60 and 63, this catch-up contribution cap is raised to $11,250, bringing their total ceiling to $35,750.

As for ordinary (contributory) and Roth IRAs, this year's overall contribution limit is $7,500, although anyone 50 or older can add an additional $1,100, pushing their total cap up to $8,600.

Even if you can't afford to take full advantage of these higher contribution limits, though, just putting a little more money into these accounts than younger investors can help quite a bit.

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The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
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