Retirement plan contributions and benefits are often tied to compensation, but federal tax rules impose limits to ensure fairness and prevent excessive tax-deferred accumulation. Understanding these compensation limits is essential for employees, employers, and self-employed individuals when planning contributions to qualified and nonqualified retirement plans.
Overview of Compensation Limits
The IRS sets annual compensation limits that determine:
- The maximum amount of employee contributions to qualified plans such as 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b).
- The maximum employer contributions to defined contribution plans like SEP IRAs and 401(k) plans.
- The salary figure used to calculate defined benefit pensions.
Limits are indexed annually for inflation.
1. 401(k), 403(b), and 457(b) Plans
| Feature | 2025 Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employee Contribution | $23,000 | Elective deferrals; catch-up contribution $7,500 for age 50+ |
| Maximum Compensation Considered | $330,000 | Employer match and plan contributions cannot exceed this salary cap for highly compensated employees |
| Total Contribution Limit (Employee + Employer) | Lesser of $69,000 or 100% of compensation | Includes salary deferrals, employer match, profit-sharing |
Example: Employee earns $350,000; plan can only consider $330,000 for contribution limits. If the employer matches 50% of contributions up to 6% of salary:
- Eligible compensation: $330,000
- 6% of $330,000 = $19,800
- 50% match = $9,900
2. SIMPLE IRA
| Feature | 2025 Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employee Contribution | $16,500 | Catch-up $3,500 for age 50+ |
| Maximum Compensation Considered | $330,000 | Employer match calculated on eligible compensation |
Example: Employee earns $250,000; contributing 6% = $15,000, employer matches 3% = $7,500.
3. SEP IRA
| Feature | 2025 Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Employer Contribution | Lesser of 25% of compensation or $69,000 | Only employer contributions allowed |
| Maximum Compensation Considered | $330,000 | Determines contribution ceiling |
Example: Employer contributes 20% of employee compensation. If employee earns $300,000, 20% = $60,000 contribution.
4. Defined Benefit (Pension) Plans
| Feature | 2025 Limit | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Annual Benefit Limit | $265,000 | Maximum annual pension payable at normal retirement age |
| Compensation Considered | $265,000 | Used in final average pay or career-average formulas |
Example: Pension formula: 1.5% × 30 years × final average salary $265,000 = $119,250 annual pension.
5. IRA Contribution Limits
- Traditional and Roth IRA: Contribution limit $6,500 (2025) with $1,000 catch-up for age 50+.
- Compensation Considered: Earned income only (wages, salary, self-employment income). Passive income or investment income does not qualify.
6. Highly Compensated Employees (HCEs)
- Compensation limits help determine HCE status: earning $150,000+ (2025 threshold) or ownership >5%.
- Retirement plans must pass nondiscrimination tests to prevent disproportionate benefits to HCEs.
Strategic Considerations
- Maximize Contributions: Contribute up to the limit to take full advantage of tax-deferred growth.
- Employer Match: Understand how compensation caps affect matching contributions.
- Plan Coordination: For individuals with multiple retirement plans, ensure total contributions across plans do not exceed IRS limits.
- Nonqualified Plans: High earners may use supplemental executive retirement plans to exceed qualified plan caps.
- Catch-Up Contributions: Individuals 50+ can leverage additional contributions to accelerate retirement savings.
Example: Contribution Calculation
Employee age 52, earns $330,000, participates in a 401(k) with 6% match:
- Employee contribution (max 2025): $23,000 + $7,500 catch-up = $30,500
- Employer match: 6% of $330,000 = $19,800
- Total 401(k) contribution = $30,500 + $19,800 = $50,300 (< $69,000 limit)
Conclusion
Compensation limits are a critical component of retirement plan design, influencing contribution potential, employer matching, and benefit calculations. Awareness of these limits allows employees to maximize savings, optimize tax benefits, and ensure compliance with IRS rules. For high earners, understanding the interaction between compensation caps, catch-up contributions, and nondiscrimination tests is essential to building a robust and compliant retirement strategy.




