Amazon 401(k) Match: Eligibility, Limits & How It Works
Amazon’s 401(k) plan gives employees a straightforward way to save for retirement, and the company match can make it even more valuable.
The main idea is simple:
- contribute enough
- stay aware of the vesting schedule, and
- use the plan features correctly so you do not leave money on the table.
How Amazon’s 401(k) Match Works
Amazon’s match formula is 50% of the first 4% of the eligible pay you contribute.
That means if you contribute 4% of your salary, Amazon contributes another 2%.
If you contribute less than 4%, you get a partial match.
And if you contribute more than 4%, you still get the full match, but no extra employer money beyond that point.
| Employee Contribution (% of pay) | Amazon Match (% of pay) |
|---|---|
| 0% | 0% |
| 1% | 0.5% |
| 2% | 1.0% |
| 3% | 1.5% |
| 4% or more | 2.0% (maximum) |
So, if we assume that you are on a $100,000 salary, your 4% employee contribution is $4,000, and Amazon’s match would be $2,000.
Who is Eligible?

Amazon makes the plan available to U.S. employees age 18 and older, generally right away upon hire.
- Be an Amazon employee
- Be scheduled for 30+ hours/week OR meet ~1,000 hours of service per year (for part-time eligibility)
- Be eligible and enrolled in the Amazon 401(k) plan
- Make your own 401(k) contributions
- Work long enough to meet vesting requirements (about 3 years of service)
That said, account access through Fidelity NetBenefits may take a little time to appear.
If you do nothing, the plan may automatically enroll you after about 90 days at a default contribution rate.
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Check If You Qualify?How to Enroll for Amazon 401(k) Match
Amazon uses Fidelity NetBenefits for plan administration.
Once your account is active, you can choose your deferral rate, pick traditional or Roth contributions, name beneficiaries, and select investments.
You can usually do all of that online without paper forms.
The basic steps are simple:
- Log in to Fidelity NetBenefits.
- Choose your contribution percentage.
- Decide between pre-tax and Roth.
- Pick investment options.
- Set your beneficiaries.
If you want the full match, set your contribution percentage at 4% or more to capture everything Amazon offers on the match side.
Vesting Rules
Amazon’s employer match follows a 3-year cliff vesting schedule.
That means the match is not yours immediately. If you leave before completing three vesting years, you forfeit the employer match.
After three vesting years, the match becomes fully vested.
A vesting year generally requires 1,000 hours of service.
| Condition | What it means | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Before 3 years of service | You have not reached vesting threshold | 0% of Amazon match is yours |
| Exactly at 3 years of service | Cliff vesting point is reached | 100% of employer match becomes yours |
| After 3 years of service | Fully vested | You keep all past + future employer match |
| Leave before 3 years | Exit Amazon early | You forfeit all employer match |
| Your own contributions | Money you personally put in | Always 100% yours immediately |
Amazon 401(k) Contribution Limits
Amazon’s plan follows the IRS annual contribution limits.
| Contribution Type | Limit |
|---|---|
| Employee elective deferral (under age 50) | $24,500 per year |
| Catch-up contribution (age 50+) | +$8,000 per year |
| Total employee limit (50+) | $32,500 per year |
| Super catch-up (age 60–63, if plan allows) | +$11,250 (instead of standard catch-up) |
| Overall 401(k) limit (employee + employer) | $72,000 or 100% of compensation (whichever is lower) |
| Compensation cap for contributions | $360,000 (approx.) |
If you are age 50 or older, catch-up contributions are also available. The catch-up amount is $7,500 in 2024 and 2025, and $8,000 in 2026.
There is also a combined annual limit for total defined-contribution inflows, including employee deferrals, employer match, and any after-tax contributions.
That is why higher earners sometimes use after-tax contributions and conversions to get more money into the plan.
Should You Choose Traditional or Roth at Amazon?
Amazon offers both traditional and Roth 401(k) contributions.
Traditional contributions are made before tax, which lowers taxable income now. The money grows tax-deferred, but withdrawals are taxed later.
Roth contributions are made after tax. That means you do not get the upfront tax break, but qualified withdrawals can be tax-free later.
The choice usually comes down to your tax situation.
| Feature | Traditional 401(k) | Roth 401(k) |
|---|---|---|
| Contributions | Pre-tax (reduces taxable income now) | Post-tax (no immediate deduction) |
| Withdrawals | Taxed as ordinary income (on contributions and earnings) | Tax-free if qualified (you owe no income tax on contributions or earnings) |
| Best for | Higher current tax rate (defers taxes) | Anticipated higher future tax rate (pay tax now) |
| IRS income limits | No income limits for contributions | No income limit (unlike Roth IRA) |
| Plan availability at Amazon | Offered (default) | Offered (you can designate any % to Roth) |
Amazon allows you to choose either one or use a mix of both.
How to Maximize the Amazon Match
The simplest move is also the best one: contribute at least 4% of pay.
1. Contribute ≥4% of pay
To capture the full 2% match, contribute at least 4% of your salary.
A smaller contribution yields a pro-rated match. I will personally recommend meeting the full match first before other investments.
2. IRS limit
Once you are at 4%, allocate more to meet IRS limits.
You can also adjust mid-year if you join Amazon late.
3. Use Roth and Traditional
Consider tax-bracket timing.
Again, I will personally recommend maxing out your pre-tax 401(k) contributions to lower AGI now, then use Roth on what remains if you expect taxes to rise.
Remember that employer match is always pre-tax.
4. Mega Backdoor Roth
If you earn a lot and max the basic 401(k), use after-tax contributions + in-plan Roth conversion to reach the limit.
This turbocharges Roth savings and next, on Fidelity’s site, enables the “convert my after-tax” option to automate this.
What Do I Personally Recommend?
If you ask me, there is no one fixed method.
But, I will recommend you to get the match first, then use the rest of your savings strategy to decide whether you want tax savings now or tax-free withdrawals later.
Amazon’s 401(k) is a strong plan if you use it properly. The match is simple, the eligibility is easy, and the Roth and after-tax features can also make it flexible.
