401k Early Withdrawal Penalty Calculator | Tax & 10% Penalty Estimate
A 401(k) distribution taken before age 59½ is generally treated as taxable income and may also incur a 10% IRS early withdrawal penalty, applied on top of ordinary income tax.
The combined effect can significantly reduce the portion of savings ultimately received.
How To Convert 401(k) to Real Estate Without Penalty?
Discover the little-known strategy some investors use to buy real estate with retirement funds—and the rules that can help avoid taxes and penalties.
The final outcome depends on
- withdrawal amount and
- applicable tax rate
..which determines how much is lost to taxes and penalties versus what remains as usable cash.
Can Tipped Employees Use a 401(k)?
Find Out NowHow to Fill out Your 401(k) Withdrawal Details
Current age
Enter your age today to determine whether the 10% early withdrawal penalty applies and whether any age-based exceptions (such as 59½ or the Rule of 55) may apply.
Withdrawal amount
Input the total amount you plan to take out of your 401(k) at one time.
Federal tax rate
This is your estimated federal income tax rate on the withdrawal.
It will show you how much of the taxable portion will go to federal income taxes based on your income bracket.
State tax rate
Some states tax retirement withdrawals, while others do not, so this may be 0% depending on your location.
| State Type | States | State Tax on 401(k) Withdrawals |
|---|---|---|
| No state income tax | Alaska, Florida, Nevada, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Washington, Wyoming, New Hampshire | 0% (no state tax) |
| Fully taxable states | California, New York, New Jersey, Oregon, Minnesota, Massachusetts, etc. (most income-tax states) | Taxed at normal state income tax rates (about 1%–13% depending on income/state) |
| Partially exempt / retirement-friendly states | Pennsylvania, Illinois, Mississippi, Iowa, Alabama, Arizona, Colorado, Georgia, etc. | 0%–reduced tax depending on age/income exemptions |
Adjusted Gross Income (AGI)
Your AGI (income after deductions) is used mainly to check whether you qualify for certain exceptions, such as the medical expense threshold for penalty relief.
Unreimbursed medical expenses
Enter any qualified medical expenses you paid out of pocket that were not reimbursed.
Years until retirement
How many years do you plan to leave your money invested before retirement?
This is to estimate the long-term growth you give up by withdrawing early.
Expected annual return
There is no one fixed number, but take an average yearly investment return you expect your retirement savings to earn if left invested.
Plan type
Select whether your account is:
- Traditional 401(k): Pre-tax contributions, withdrawals taxed as income
- Roth 401(k): After-tax contributions, with different rules for contributions vs earnings
Withdrawal source
Choose what portion of your Roth account you are withdrawing from:
- Roth contributions: Already taxed money, typically tax- and penalty-free
- Roth earnings: Investment gains, which may be taxable or penalty-free depending on conditions
- Taxable pre-tax money: Traditional 401(k) funds, fully taxable on withdrawal
How the 401(k) Early Withdrawal Calculator Works

This calculator estimates the immediate cost of taking money out of your retirement account early.
When calculating your results, our calculator accounts for:
- Age-based penalty rules
- Account type differences between Traditional 401(k) and Roth 401(k)
- IRS penalty exceptions
- Medical expense threshold rules
- Expected investment growth
- State and federal tax rates
You can change any of these inputs in the calculator above, personalized to you, to see how different ages, tax rates, or exception rules affect your withdrawal cost and long-term retirement impact.
