The IRS lets almost anyone with earned income tuck money into an IRA, and for tax year 2025, the annual cap sits at $7,500 for savers under 50. The number is designedThe IRS lets almost anyone with earned income tuck money into an IRA, and for tax year 2025, the annual cap sits at $7,500 for savers under 50. The number is designed

The $7,500 IRA Limit Almost Nobody Hits: The Average American Contributes Just $3,482

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  • Most IRA contributors fall dramatically short of the $7,000 annual limit, with average Roth IRA contributions hitting just $3,482 in 2022.
  • Maxing an IRA would consume nearly 11% of median worker income before accounting for 401(k) contributions, mortgages, or health premiums.
  • Personal consumption now absorbs 92.3% of disposable income, leaving Americans with only a 3.9% savings rate in early 2026.
  • Even savers aged 50+ with catch-up provisions averaged just $4,954 in contributions, leaving $2,000+ annually on the table.
  • Housing and healthcare expenses alone devour roughly 35% of American household spending, crowding out retirement savings.
  • Average household spending jumped to $78,535 in 2024, outpacing wage growth and squeezing room for discretionary retirement contributions.
  • Consumer confidence has cratered to 44.8 in May 2026, down from 61.7 just nine months earlier, signaling household financial stress.
  • Are you ahead, or behind on retirement? SmartAsset's free tool can match you with a financial advisor in minutes to help you answer that today. Each advisor has been carefully vetted, and must act in your best interests. Don't waste another minute; learn more here.

The IRS lets almost anyone with earned income tuck money into an IRA, and for tax year 2025, the annual cap sits at $7,500 for savers under 50. The number is designed to reward consistent saving. It also happens to be a limit that the vast majority of contributors never come close to touching. According to the Congressional Research Service’s analysis of IRS Statistics of Income data for 2022 (the most recent year available), roughly 10 million taxpayers contributed to Roth IRAs, with an average contribution of $3,482. For traditional IRAs, about 5 million taxpayers contributed an average of $4,510. Both figures sit well below the statutory ceiling.

The IRA limit assumes a saver with enough discretionary income to set aside roughly $580 a month. Median usual weekly earnings for full-time workers came in at $1,235 in the first quarter of 2026, which, annualized, amounts to around $64,220 in pre-tax pay. Maxing an IRA at $7,500 would consume close to 12% of that income before any 401(k) deferral, mortgage payment, or health premium. For a household already funding an employer plan, the math becomes tighter still.

Age Changes the Picture, But Not by Much

The IRS data breaks traditional IRA contributions into age bands, and the pattern is consistent with what other retirement surveys show: contributions climb with age, but only modestly. Younger savers put in less because they earn less and because retirement feels distant. Older savers put in more because catch-up rules allow it and because retirement is closer, but even they leave meaningful room under the ceiling.

  1. Under 35: average traditional IRA contribution of $3,494
  2. Age 35 to under 50: $4,258
  3. Age 50 to under 65: $4,911
  4. Age 65 to under 72: $5,095

A saver aged 50 or older in 2022 could contribute up to $7,000, including the catch-up. The average in that group came in around $4,954, and only 53.5% of contributors in that band actually hit the maximum.

The rest fell short, in many cases by thousands of dollars a year. Balances reflect that shortfall; Fidelity’s Q3 2025 retirement analysis puts the average IRA balance at $137,902 for Baby Boomers, with generational breakdowns of $103,952 for Gen X, $25,109 for Millennials, and $6,672 for Gen Z.

The Budget Math Behind the Shortfall

Bureau of Economic Analysis data explains why the ceiling is so rarely reached. Personal consumption in the first quarter of 2026 absorbed 92.3% of disposable personal income, leaving a personal savings rate of just 3.9%. That rate has drifted lower over the past two years, from 6.2% in the first quarter of 2024. Per capita disposable income has risen over the same stretch, from $63,638 to $68,391, but the additional income has been absorbed by spending rather than savings.

Housing services and healthcare alone accounted for $7,666.3 billion of consumer spending in May 2026, or roughly 34.7% of total personal consumption. Average annual household expenditures reached $78,535 in 2024, up from $72,973 in 2022. That climb outpaced median wage growth over the same period, which compressed the room a typical household has for discretionary retirement contributions.

The University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment Index fell to 48.2 in May 2026, down from 61.7 in July 2025. Credit card delinquency rates sit at 2.92%, which the Federal Reserve categorizes as the normalizing range rather than acute stress, but well above the pandemic-era low of near 1.5%. Households are managing, with a limited margin left for a $7,500 line item.

For savers looking to close the gap between the average contribution and the limit, the mechanics are unusually simple. The IRA deadline runs through the tax filing date of the following April, which allows a full 15 months to fund the current tax year. Splitting the 2026 limit of $7,500 across 12 months works out to $625 per month, and across 15 months to $500 per month. Contributors age 50 and older can add an additional $1,100 catch-up in 2026, on top of the standard limit, for a combined ceiling of $8,600. The average contribution figure suggests most households are not stretching for that ceiling, and the underlying income and spending data explain why.

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