Savings Calculator — Connecticut

Calculate how long it will take to reach your savings goal in Connecticut. Enter your starting balance, monthly contribution, annual return rate, and target amount to see a personalized savings projection.

Plan Your Savings Goal

Based on Connecticut median income of $88,000/year. 15% savings rate = $1,100/month.

Saving in Connecticut: Cost of Living & Context

Connecticut has a high cost of living (index ~123), particularly for housing and property taxes. The state has a progressive income tax with rates up to 6.99%. However, Connecticut has very high median household incomes, and residents in financial services, healthcare, and insurance tend to have strong savings capacity if housing costs are managed.

MetricConnecticut (2026)
Cost of Living Index122.7 (U.S. avg = 100)
Cost of Living vs. AverageAbove Average
Approx. Median Household Income$88,000/year
15% Savings Rate (of median income)$1,100/month
Recommended Emergency Fund3–6 months of expenses
401k Contribution Limit (2026)$23,500/year ($31,000 age 50+)
IRA Contribution Limit (2026)$7,000/year ($8,000 age 50+)

Savings Account Types Explained

Account TypeBest For2026 Limit
High-Yield Savings (HYSA)Emergency fund, short-term goalsNo limit (FDIC insured)
Traditional 401(k)Retirement; reduces current taxable income$23,500 ($31,000 age 50+)
Roth 401(k)Retirement; tax-free withdrawalsSame as Traditional 401(k)
Traditional IRARetirement; may be tax-deductible$7,000 ($8,000 age 50+)
Roth IRARetirement; tax-free growth (income limits)$7,000 ($8,000 age 50+)
529 PlanCollege savings; state tax deduction in many statesVaries by state
HSAMedical expenses + retirement (after 65); triple tax advantage$4,300 individual / $8,550 family
I-Bonds (Series I)Inflation protection; guaranteed not to lose value$10,000/year per person

Frequently Asked Questions — Saving in Connecticut

Connecticut's cost of living index is approximately 122.7 compared to a U.S. average of 100. This means the cost of living in Connecticut is above average. Housing is typically the largest driver of cost differences between states. Use the calculator above to model your savings timeline based on your specific income and goals.

Financial experts commonly recommend saving at least 15% of gross income for retirement. On Connecticut's median household income of $88,000, that's about $1,100/month. For emergency funds, aim for 3–6 months of living expenses in a liquid, FDIC-insured account before investing aggressively.

Compound interest means earning returns on your previous returns. For example, $1,100/month invested at 7% annual return for 30 years grows to approximately $1,341,862 — even though you only contributed $396,000. The growth from compounding exceeds your total contributions by far. Starting earlier has a dramatically larger impact than saving more later.

The choice depends on whether you expect to be in a higher or lower tax bracket in retirement. If you're in a low bracket now (or Connecticut's state income tax is high in retirement), Roth may be better — you pay taxes now at lower rates. If you're in a high bracket now and expect lower income in retirement, Traditional accounts let you defer taxes to when your rate is lower.

Return expectations vary by account type: High-yield savings accounts currently pay 4–5% (but this fluctuates with Fed rates). I-Bonds pay inflation rate + a fixed rate. A diversified stock index fund (like an S&P 500 index fund) has historically returned about 10% annually before inflation, or ~7% after inflation. The calculator defaults to 7% as a reasonable long-term estimate for a diversified investment portfolio.