Broker Check
Bill Riddick
Bill Riddick
Riddick & Co Entrepreneurial Finance Financial Advisor
https://riddickfinance.com 772-617-5757

William (Bill) Riddick has a series 66 (investment adviser representative) and offers investment advisory services through Riddick & Co Entrepreneurial Finance, LLC. He is also a licensed insurance producer in the state of Florida for life, health and annuities.

  • Financial Planning, Goal Analysis & Generational Planning
  • Institutional Investment Management Strategies for Individuals & Businesses Owners.
  • Business Retirement Plans (401Ks w/ Roth, Profit Sharing, Defined Benefit, Simple IRA, SEP IRA, etc.).
  • Term & Permanent Life Insurance, Disability Insurance, Long Term Care


  • Fixed & Indexed Annuities including living benefit riders


  • Fiduciary Standard of Care

The Power of 401k Catch-Ups

Discover how 401(k) catch-up contributions, like the new "super catch-up" for ages 60-63, can significantly boost your retirement savings. See the potential difference these contributions could make by age 67.

Your Information

$
$0$10M
%

2026 Contribution Limits

Standard Contribution Limit$24,500
50+ Catch-Up Limit+$8,000
60-63 "Super Catch-Up" Limit+$11,250

Your Catch-Up Benefit

With both regular catch-up contributions and 60-63 catch-up contributions between ages 60-67

Additional Savings by Age 67
$0
Additional Monthly Income Over 30-Year Retirement$0

Projected Balance at Age 67

Regular Contributions Only$24,500/year
$0
With 50+ Catch-Up$32,500/year
$0
With Super Catch-Up (60-63)$35,750/year ages 60-63, then $32,500/year
$0

Growth Comparison

This is the additional amount you could accumulate by age 67 if you take full advantage of catch-up contributions, including the enhanced "super catch-up" for ages 60-63. This could provide approximately $0 in additional monthly retirement income.

Once you reach age 73, you must begin taking required minimum distributions (RMDs) from your 401(k) or any other defined contribution plan in most circumstances. Withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income and, if taken before age 59½, may be subject to a 10% federal income tax penalty.

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