2025 SIMPLE Plan Limits: $16,500 Base and SECURE Act Increases

For 2025, SIMPLE plans get higher deferral limits: $16,500 base, $3,500 catch-up (50+), and a $5,250 special catch-up (60–63). Small employers (≤25 employees) may use $17,600 limits; contribution rules and immediate vesting remain unchanged. Cost-of-living adjustments start in 2026.

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Key takeaways
2025 SIMPLE salary-deferral limit is $16,500; workers 50+ may add $3,500 catch-up.
Employers with 25 or fewer employees allow $17,600 deferrals; 3% match or 4% nonelective preserves higher limits.
SECURE Act 2.0 adds $5,250 special catch-up for ages 60–63 and cost-of-living adjustments starting 2026.

Small employers and self‑employed workers in the United States will see higher retirement savings room in 2025 under SIMPLE plans, with special boosts for very small businesses and older workers close to retirement. The Internal Revenue Service confirmed new dollar limits and clarified rules that apply equally to a SIMPLE IRA and a SIMPLE 401(k), giving immigrant‑owned shops, solo professionals, and family firms a clearer path to build savings while keeping administration light.

New 2025 SIMPLE limits and who benefits

2025 SIMPLE Plan Limits: ,500 Base and SECURE Act Increases
2025 SIMPLE Plan Limits: $16,500 Base and SECURE Act Increases

The 2025 salary deferral limit for a SIMPLE plan is $16,500 for workers under age 50. Workers aged 50 and older may add a standard catch‑up of $3,500, bringing their total elective deferral to $20,000. A further change from SECURE Act 2.0 gives people aged 60 to 63 a higher catch‑up of $5,250 in 2025. This targeted increase helps late‑career workers make up ground before retirement.

Congress also created a new higher limit for the smallest employers:

  • If an employer has 25 or fewer employees, eligible workers under 50 can defer up to $17,600, and those 50 or older can make a catch‑up of $3,850.
  • For employers with 26 to 100 employees, the higher limits may still apply if the employer commits to a 3% match or a 4% nonelective contribution.

These changes take effect for plan years starting in 2025 and are designed to make SIMPLE plans more attractive where tight budgets and thin staffing often block retirement benefits.

Under a SIMPLE, the contribution methods and limits for a SIMPLE IRA and a SIMPLE 401(k) are the same. A SIMPLE plan cannot be a Roth IRA, which matters for workers who want Roth features; SIMPLE plans, by design, keep rules uniform and easier for small employers to follow.

According to analysis by VisaVerge.com, the IRS rolled out the 2025 adjustments after Congress expanded SIMPLE plan flexibility in SECURE Act 2.0. The agency’s guidance ties the higher limits to employer size and clarifies that the special catch‑up for ages 60‑63 is a separate increase on top of the base limits.

Employer contribution rules, vesting, and compensation caps

Employers offering a SIMPLE plan must fund one of two standard contributions each year:

  • A 100% match on the first 3% of an employee’s pay that is deferred into the plan, or
  • A 2% nonelective contribution for all eligible employees who earn at least $5,000 in the year.

Employer contributions are immediately 100% vested, giving workers full ownership as soon as the money hits their account.

For 2025, compensation counted for these formulas is capped at $350,000. SECURE Act 2.0 also allows an extra nonelective contribution by the employer of up to 10% of pay or $5,000, whichever is less. That optional contribution can help firms reward staff during stronger years without the higher compliance load of a large 401(k).

⚠️ Important
Don’t assume Roth treatment is available: SIMPLE plans cannot be Roth accounts—if workers need after‑tax Roth savings, set up a separate Roth IRA or a different qualified plan to preserve that option.

SIMPLE IRA vs. SIMPLE 401(k): choosing the right fit

SIMPLE plans come in two forms; each serves the same core goal with different administrative trade‑offs.

  • SIMPLE IRA
    • Not subject to nondiscrimination or top‑heavy testing.
    • No plan loans.
    • Generally no annual Form 5500 filing.
    • Often lower cost and easier to run with a bank or brokerage.
  • SIMPLE 401(k)
    • A qualified plan, so it sits under 401(k) rules.
    • Under certain conditions, it is not subject to nondiscrimination and top‑heavy rules.
    • May involve more formal plan documents and some 401(k) procedures.

Both plan types share the same contribution limits and employer funding choices. For many immigrant‑owned restaurants, salons, trucking firms, and home health agencies, the SIMPLE IRA keeps paperwork light and costs predictable. Owners who want the 401(k) structure but still need simple rules may choose a SIMPLE 401(k) to align with a trusted recordkeeper while staying within the SIMPLE framework.

Step‑by‑step: set up and run a SIMPLE plan

A SIMPLE plan is designed for speed and clarity. The process is straightforward for the self‑employed and for small employers.

  1. Choose the plan type.
    • Decide between a SIMPLE IRA and a SIMPLE 401(k) based on team size, need for 401(k) features, and comfort with administration.
  2. Adopt a written plan.
    • For a SIMPLE IRA, complete Form 5304‑SIMPLE or Form 5305‑SIMPLE:
      • Form 5304‑SIMPLE is used when each employee can choose the financial institution for their SIMPLE IRA. Access it at About Form 5304-SIMPLE.
      • Form 5305‑SIMPLE is used when the employer names the financial institution for all employees’ SIMPLE IRAs. Access it at About Form 5305-SIMPLE.
    • For a SIMPLE 401(k), adopt a prototype plan from a provider or a pre‑approved plan document.
  3. Notify employees.
    • Provide written notice to all eligible workers at least 60 days before the plan year starts. The notice should explain eligibility, how to make salary deferrals, and the employer contribution (match or nonelective).
  4. Set up accounts.
    • Open SIMPLE IRA accounts for each employee or establish the SIMPLE 401(k) with a provider.
  5. Make contributions.
    • Employees elect salary deferrals; employers fund the required match or nonelective contribution.
  6. Administer and recordkeep.
    • Track contributions and keep plan records. SIMPLE IRAs generally don’t require a Form 5500 filing, easing the annual workload.
  7. Review annually.
    • Update notices and plan documents to reflect new limits, including the 2025 increases and any later cost‑of‑living adjustments.

For official reference, the IRS Retirement Plans page provides core rules, forms, and updates, including retirement‑related dollar limits and agency notices.

Why these changes were made, and what comes next

Lawmakers used SECURE Act 2.0 to push more coverage at small firms where many workers—especially immigrants and first‑generation Americans—don’t have access to large 401(k)s. The higher deferral limit for small employers (25 or fewer workers) is aimed at mom‑and‑pop businesses that want to save but need a plan with light oversight.

The special catch‑up for ages 60 to 63 supports people who may have lost saving years while building a business, raising a family, or moving to the United States and resetting careers.

The IRS announced the 2025 SIMPLE increases in late 2024 guidance, including Notice 2024‑80, and confirmed that cost‑of‑living adjustments will begin in 2026 for SIMPLE plan amounts. That means the dollar limits should track inflation over time, helping contributions keep pace with prices.

Important: Cost‑of‑living adjustments begin in 2026, so plan limits may rise annually after that point.

📝 Note
For owners aged 60–63, the 2025 special catch‑up ($5,250) is incremental to standard catch‑ups—confirm payroll systems can apply the extra amount so you capture the full allowable deferral.

Impact on self‑employed workers and immigrant‑owned small businesses

For sole proprietors—rideshare drivers, IT consultants, real estate agents—the SIMPLE IRA brings an easy structure: one plan document, one account, and clear annual funding formulas.

  • Example scenarios:
    • A 50‑year‑old consultant can defer $20,000 in 2025 (base plus standard catch‑up).
    • A 61‑year‑old can use the $5,250 special catch‑up to reach a higher total, subject to SIMPLE limits and earned income rules.
  • Business examples:
    • A small grocery with eight employees can pick the 3% match and keep costs tied to employee deferrals. If business improves, the owner could add the optional SECURE 2.0 nonelective contribution of up to 10% of pay or $5,000, whichever is less.
    • An immigrant‑owned trucking fleet with 35 drivers may adopt the higher deferral limits for 2025 if the company offers a 3% match or 4% nonelective contribution, even though it has more than 25 employees.

These choices can help recruit workers who value extra retirement savings room and help small firms retain staff.

Eligibility, notices, and fairness features

SIMPLE rules aim to keep the plan fair without heavy testing:

  • Employer must either match the first 3% of deferrals or pay 2% nonelective for all eligible employees earning at least $5,000 in the year.
  • Employer money is immediately vested, so workers keep every dollar if they change jobs.
  • For SIMPLE IRAs, there are no plan loans and generally no Form 5500 requirement, which helps small employers avoid extra filings.

The annual notice—given at least 60 days before the plan year—lets employees choose how much to defer and explains the employer’s contribution type. Clear, early notice is especially helpful in workplaces where English is a second language; it gives time to ask questions and set deferral rates that fit each paycheck.

Administrative trade‑offs to consider

  • Choose SIMPLE IRA if you want the lightest administration, no loans, and no annual Form 5500. It’s often the best fit for a family restaurant, local market, or solo practice.
  • Choose SIMPLE 401(k) if you prefer a 401(k) structure and want to work within a qualified plan framework while keeping SIMPLE rules on contributions. Under certain conditions, it avoids nondiscrimination and top‑heavy testing.

Both options share the same 2025 limits, including the small‑employer higher deferral and the age‑based catch‑ups.

Regulatory and enforcement landscape

  • The IRS is the main authority for SIMPLE plans.
  • The Department of Labor has oversight for certain SIMPLE 401(k) rules.
  • Employers, self‑employed workers, and financial institutions are the key players in setup and day‑to‑day operations.

The law behind the 2025 changes—SECURE Act 2.0—was passed by Congress to widen coverage and raise savings, especially at smaller companies. Experts note these updates make SIMPLE more attractive: for many businesses that cannot take on a full 401(k), the SIMPLE IRA keeps costs low while giving employees a real path to retirement security. The targeted catch‑up for ages 60 to 63 is a timely tool for late‑career workers who need extra room in the years just before retirement.

Looking ahead to 2026 and beyond

  • Cost‑of‑living adjustments start in 2026, so SIMPLE limits may rise year by year.
  • Employers should:
    • Refresh their annual notices,
    • Confirm which limit applies based on workforce size, and
    • Decide each year whether to use the higher deferral structure tied to matches or nonelective contributions.
  • Workers should watch for plan notices each fall and set deferrals early so the full year’s paychecks can support their savings goals.

SIMPLE plans have one job: make saving easy. With clear rules, instant vesting, and bigger 2025 limits, both the SIMPLE IRA and the SIMPLE 401(k) are set to help more small workplaces—and the people who power them—build a steadier retirement.

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Learn Today
SIMPLE plan → A retirement savings plan designed for small employers and self-employed workers with straightforward contribution rules.
SIMPLE IRA → A type of SIMPLE plan using individual retirement accounts, usually lower-cost and with minimal annual filing requirements.
SIMPLE 401(k) → A SIMPLE plan that follows 401(k)-style rules but maintains SIMPLE contribution and vesting features.
Catch-up contribution → An extra retirement contribution allowed for older workers above the standard deferral limit to accelerate savings.
SECURE Act 2.0 → A 2022 law that expanded retirement plan options and added features like higher catch-up limits for certain ages.
Nonelective contribution → An employer contribution to a plan made for all eligible employees regardless of their deferrals.
Form 5304-SIMPLE / Form 5305-SIMPLE → IRS forms employers use to adopt a SIMPLE IRA plan, differing by whether employees select the financial institution.
Form 5500 → An annual report filed for many retirement plans; SIMPLE IRAs generally do not require this filing.

This Article in a Nutshell

For 2025, SIMPLE plans get higher deferral limits: $16,500 base, $3,500 catch-up (50+), and a $5,250 special catch-up (60–63). Small employers (≤25 employees) may use $17,600 limits; contribution rules and immediate vesting remain unchanged. Cost-of-living adjustments start in 2026.

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Sai Sankar is a law postgraduate with over 30 years of extensive experience in various domains of taxation, including direct and indirect taxes. With a rich background spanning consultancy, litigation, and policy interpretation, he brings depth and clarity to complex legal matters. Now a contributing writer for Visa Verge, Sai Sankar leverages his legal acumen to simplify immigration and tax-related issues for a global audience.
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