The rules for saving after 50 are written to help. Anyone at or past that age can add money to a 401(k) beyond the standard limit. In 2026, the extra amount rose to $8,000, up from the $7,500 figure that ran through 2024. Workers ages 60 to 63 can contribute even more under SECURE 2.0, up to $11,250. On paper, this is one of the more generous features in the U.S. retirement system.
In practice, almost no one uses it. According to Vanguard’s How America Saves report, based on data from 4.8 million participants, 98% of plans offer catch-up contributions, but only 16% of eligible participants aged 50 and older actually make one. That share has barely moved in years, and the average worker over 50 contributes nothing extra toward the cap.
Why the Number Is So Low
The catch-up limit assumes that a saver already has budget slack, and BLS data suggest most do not. Median usual weekly earnings for full-time workers were $1,235 in the first quarter of 2026, which, annualized, amounts to roughly $64,000 before taxes. Average annual household consumer expenditures reached $78,535 in 2024, the most recent BLS reading. For a median earner, finding an extra $8,000 to divert into a retirement account requires cutting somewhere, and the household budget is already running close to or above income.
Wage growth has not solved this. Average hourly earnings rose from $35.01 in June 2024 to $37.64 in June 2026, but real hourly earnings adjusted for inflation sat at $11.23 in May 2026, essentially flat against the $11.14 reading from May 2024. Nominal paychecks are bigger, but purchasing power has stayed roughly flat.
The Backdrop Is Getting Harder
Inflation reaccelerated in the spring. Headline PCE ran at 4.1% year over year in May 2026, up from 2.9% in February. Energy prices carried much of that jump, climbing 24.3% year over year. Services inflation, the category that covers healthcare, housing, and insurance, sat at 3.8%. Those are the exact expense categories that dominate spending for workers over 50.
Savings capacity has narrowed alongside those pressures. The personal savings rate was 3.9% in the first quarter of 2026, the lowest reading in three years and down from 6.2% in the first quarter of 2024. Consumer sentiment hit 44.8 in May 2026, a level the University of Michigan classifies as approaching recessionary territory. The credit card delinquency rate stood at 2.9% at the start of 2026, inside what economists call the normalizing range but well above the pandemic-era low near 1.5%.
For a worker facing those conditions, the choice is often between the catch-up contribution and current bills.
Who Uses the Catch-Up
The 16% who do make catch-up contributions tend to be higher earners with plan access, employer matches, and slack in the household budget. Prior Fidelity data referenced by the Center for Retirement Research at Boston College found that catch-up users were saving roughly 21% to 23% of their salary when they participated. These are savers who were already on track. The catch-up rule adds room at the top for people who had already filled the standard bucket, which explains why raising the ceiling changes so little for the median worker.
What the Data Says and Does Not Say
The gap between the $8,000 headline and the near-zero average reflects more than discipline. Social Security’s 2026 cost-of-living adjustment came in at 2.8%, running below headline PCE inflation. Per capita disposable income reached $68,391 in the first quarter of 2026, higher than two years earlier, yet the savings rate fell over the same window. The tax break exists. The room in the plan exists. The room in the household budget is what is missing for most workers on the runway to retirement.
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