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Updated December 15, 2023
The Retirement Savings Contribution Credit and the Saver’s 
Match
The Retirement Savings Contribution Credit (Internal 
In 2023, the maximum credit rate of 50% is available to 
Revenue Code [I.R.C.] §25B)—commonly referred to as 
taxpayers with AGIs of $43,500 or less for married 
the Saver’s Credit—is a tax expenditure meant to encourage 
taxpayers filing joint returns, $32,625 or less for head of 
low- and moderate-income taxpayers to save for retirement. 
household (HoH) filers, and $20,750 or less for single filers 
The SECURE 2.0 Act of 2022 (“SECURE 2.0”; Division T 
and other filers. For example, a married taxpayer earning 
of P.L. 117-328) included a provision that replaces the 
$43,500 who files jointly and makes $2,000 in eligible 
Saver’s Credit with a Saver’s Match beginning in 2027. 
contributions would be eligible for a $1,000 credit. If the 
This In Focus describes these two subsidies for saving and 
couple’s income increased by one dollar, their credit would 
their effects (actual or potential) on saving.  
fall to $400 ($2,000 x 20%). No credit is available for 
married taxpayers filing joint returns once AGI exceeds 
The Saver’s Credit 
$73,000 since the credit rate is zero. 
Eligible taxpayers can claim a nonrefundable tax credit for 
contributions to certain retirement accounts. The Economic 
Figure 1. Rate of Saver’s Credit by Filing Status, 2023 
Growth and Tax Relief Reconciliation Act of 2001 
(EGTRRA; P.L. 107-16) created the Saver’s Credit. The 
credit took effect in 2002 and was scheduled to expire after 
2006, but the Pension Protection Act of 2006 (P.L. 109-
290) made it permanent.  
To claim the tax credit, the saver must (1) be at least 18 
years old; (2) not be claimed as a dependent on someone 
else’s tax return; (3) not be a full-time student; and (4) fall 
under specified income thresholds.  
The maximum credit amount is $1,000 per person (up to 
$2,000 per married couple filing jointly). Taxpayers 
calculate the credit by multiplying their qualified retirement 
 
account contributions (up to a limit) by a credit rate (which 
Source: CRS and I.R.C. §25B. 
declines as income rises). The credit is nonrefundable, 
Notes: The credit rate applies to contributions, not to AGI.  
meaning the credit cannot exceed income tax liability. 
Since low-income taxpayers typically owe little to no 
While the maximum credit is $1,000 per individual ($2,000 
income tax, nonrefundable credits like the Saver’s Credit 
per married couple), most taxpayers receive less. Many 
may have little to no effect on their tax liability.  
low-income households lack resources to contribute to their 
Retirement account contributions of up to $2,000 per 
retirement accounts to qualify for the maximum credit. 
person qualify for the credit. Eligible contributions include 
Since the credit is nonrefundable, many lack sufficient tax 
those to traditional and Roth Individual Retirement 
liability to receive the full credit.  
Accounts (IRAs) and defined contribution (DC) retirement 
plans, such as 401(k) plans. From 2018 through 2025, P.L. 
The Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) estimated the 
Saver’s Credit will cost the federal government $1.5 billion 
115-97 (commonly known as the “Tax Cuts and Jobs Act”) 
lets taxpayers claim the Saver’s Credit for contributions to 
in foregone revenue in FY2024. 
their own Achieving a Better Life Experience (ABLE) 
Saver’s Credit Statistics 
accounts. ABLE accounts are tax-favored savings vehicles 
for people with disabilities. 
Few taxpayers claim the Saver’s Credit, and the average 
credit is small. Table 1 shows that in 2021, the Internal 
The credit rate depends on a taxpayer’s adjusted gross 
Revenue Service (IRS) estimates that 5.7% of taxpayers 
income (AGI) and filing status. The AGI thresholds create 
claimed the credit, and the average credit was $191. 
“cliffs” at which the credit rate falls discretely, from 50% to 
A smaller share of low-income earners claimed the credit 
20%; 20% to 10%; and 10% to 0% (Figure 1). These 
than those with moderate incomes. Of taxpayers with AGI 
thresholds are adjusted annually for changes to the cost of 
below $10,000, 0.04% claimed the credit, as few such 
living. 
taxpayers have income tax liabilities. Of those with AGIs 
from $25,000 to under $50,000, 15.1% claimed the credit.  
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The Retirement Savings Contribution Credit and the Saver’s Match 
Table 1. Share of Tax Returns Claiming Saver’s Credit 
benefit rate falls suddenly. This change should minimize 
and Average Credit Amount, 2021 
the degree to which the tax benefit encourages taxpayers to 
report lower incomes. 
AGI 
Share Claiming  
Average Credit 
$1-<$10K 
~0.0%a 
$183 
Unlike for the Saver’s Credit, these thresholds will be 
$10K-< $25K 
7.0% 
$176 
calculated using a modified AGI that does not exclude the 
$25K-<$50K 
15.1% 
$200 
value of contributions to qualified retirement accounts. The 
$50K-<$75K 
6.5% 
$176 
JCT estimated that the Saver’s Match will lower revenues 
$75K+ 
0.0% 
$0 
by $9.3 billion from FY2023 to 2032. 
All Taxpayers 
5.7% 
$191 
Source: CRS and IRS Statistics of Income. 
Despite both having maximum benefit rates of 50%, the 
a. The share claiming the credit is positive but rounds to 0.0%.  
rates apply to different bases. Unlike the Saver’s Match, the 
Saver’s Credit lets taxpayers contribute more cash out of 
Why Do Few Claim the Credit? 
pocket, and therefore qualify for a larger credit. For 
example, if an eligible taxpayer was willing to reduce 
Empirical studies (all of which are at least a decade old) 
consumption by $600 to save, he or she could contribute 
generally found that the Saver’s Credit does not encourage 
$1,200 and offset the cost with a $600 Saver’s Credit. In 
low-income taxpayers to save more for retirement. There 
contrast, a similar taxpayer who received the Saver’s Match 
are several possible reasons low-income people struggle to 
would contribute $600 and receive a $300 match, for total 
save. In a recent Federal Reserve study, 32% of households 
savings of $900. Whereas the Saver’s Credit provides up to 
said they could not cover a sudden expense of less than 
50% of total after-tax-benefit savings, the Saver’s Match 
$500 in full using cash, suggesting many lack the financial 
will provide up to 33% (Figure 2). 
capacity to save. Further, 87% of the lowest-earning fifth of 
households did not hold retirement accounts in 2022.  
Figure 2. Adjusted Saver’s Match Rates, 2027 
Additionally, since the Saver’s Credit is nonrefundable, it 
offers little (or no) benefit to low-income households with 
little (or no) income tax liability. Lack of awareness might 
also limit the credit’s efficacy. In 2021, 48% of workers at 
for-profit companies had heard of the credit. Taxpayers 
could not claim the credit using Form 1040EZ—meant for 
lower-income filers with simple returns before the IRS 
discontinued it as of 2018—which may have made lack of 
awareness particularly significant. 
Even if the Saver’s Credit were to encourage retirement 
savings, it may not raise overall savings. Early withdrawal 
penalties for certain types of accounts are a barrier to 
retirement saving. If the Saver’s Credit helps overcome this 
 
Source: CRS and I.R.C. §6433. 
barrier, some taxpayers may shift other forms of savings 
 
into retirement accounts, without increasing total savings.  
The Saver’s Match does not address other barriers that may 
One 2013 study found some taxpayers adjusted their 
prevent low-income people from saving. These include 
income to points just below cliffs to maximize this credit. 
access to employer-provided retirement accounts and a lack 
This suggests that rather than encouraging saving, the credit 
of resources to save. 
may discourage taxpayers from earning (or reporting) 
additional income to avoid losing the credit.  
Despite these considerations, Saver’s Match may create an 
incentive to save for some people that the Saver’s Credit 
Change to a Saver’s Match 
does not reach. Those who contribute up to the Saver’s 
SECURE 2.0 created a federal Saver’s Match to replace the 
Credit contribution cap of $2,000 (meaning they save less 
Saver’s Credit in 2027 (I.R.C. §6433). Rather than 
out of pocket, after accounting for the credit they receive) 
receiving a credit, eligible individuals will have matches 
will continue receiving the Saver’s Match on additional 
contributed to their retirement accounts. Relative to the 
savings until their out-of-pocket savings reach the cap of 
Saver’s Credit, the Saver’s Match will have a lower 
$2,000. The Saver’s Match will also not be limited to a 
maximum effective rate, but it may reach more taxpayers. 
saver’s income tax liability, removing a barrier for the 
lowest-income savers. SECURE 2.0 also encouraged the 
Savers with modified AGIs below $20,500 ($41,000 for 
Treasury Department to promote the Saver’s Match, which 
married filing jointly) will qualify for a 50% federal match 
may improve its salience with taxpayers.  
on up to $2,000 in retirement savings—that is, a maximum 
 
match of $1,000. This income threshold will be adjusted for 
Molly F. Sherlock wrote a prior version of this In Focus. 
the cost of living for years after 2027. Those who earn up to 
$15,000 more than this threshold ($30,000 more for married 
Brendan McDermott, Analyst in Public Finance   
couples filing jointly) will qualify for a reduced match. The 
match’s structure eliminates the sudden cliffs at which the 
IF11159
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The Retirement Savings Contribution Credit and the Saver’s Match 
 
 
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https://crsreports.congress.gov | IF11159 · VERSION 4 · UPDATED