ABLE Account Tax Calculator 2026 β€” Disability Savings

Calculate ABLE account contribution limits including ABLE-to-Work, tax-free growth, SSI exemption analysis, and compare ABLE vs Special Needs Trust.

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Excess (6% Penalty Applies)
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Projected Balance in 10 Years

ABLE Account Calculation Summary

How ABLE Account Limits Work in 2026

The annual ABLE contribution limit is $19,000 from all sources combined. Working beneficiaries can add ABLE-to-Work contributions on top of the base limit β€” the lesser of prior year earned income or the federal poverty level (~$15,060). Contributions beyond the limit face a 6% excise tax.

The Formula

Base Limit = $19,000 (2026 gift tax annual exclusion)
ABLE-to-Work Bonus = min(Prior Year Earned Income, FPL ~$15,060) if working
Maximum Total = Base Limit + ABLE-to-Work Bonus
Excess = max(0, Contributions - Maximum Total)
SSI Safe = Balance + New Contributions <= $100,000

Example

Working beneficiary earning $20,000, contributing $25,000 total:
Base limit: $19,000
ABLE-to-Work bonus: min($20,000, $15,060) = $15,060
Maximum: $34,060
Your contribution: $25,000 β€” within limit, no excess penalty
SSI: Balance must stay at or below $100,000 to avoid suspension
Extended

ABLE vs Special Needs Trust Comparison

Side-by-side analysis, SSI exemption at different balances, and benefit cost chart

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ABLE Account vs Special Needs Trust β€” Feature Comparison

FeatureABLE AccountSpecial Needs Trust (1st Party)
Setup Cost$0 – $50 (online enrollment)$2,000 – $5,000+ (attorney required)
Annual MaintenanceMinimal (plan fees ~0.3%)$1,000 – $3,000/year trustee fees
SSI Resource LimitExempt up to $100,000Fully exempt (no limit)
Medicaid EligibilityNever countedNever counted
Contribution Limit$19,000/year (state cap may apply)Unlimited
Beneficiary ControlSelf-directed (if mentally capable)Trustee controls
Tax-Free GrowthYesNo (trust taxed at compressed rates)
Medicaid PaybackYes (some states) upon deathYes (1st party trust) upon death
Investment OptionsPlan menu (usually index funds)Broad (managed by trustee)

SSI Exemption Analysis at Different Balances

ABLE BalanceSSI ImpactExcess Over $100KAction Needed

Annual Net Benefit: ABLE vs SNT (After Fees)

ABLE Account Special Needs Trust $0

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the 2026 ABLE account annual contribution limit?
The 2026 annual ABLE contribution limit is $19,000 (matching the gift tax annual exclusion). This is the combined total from ALL contributors β€” family, friends, the beneficiary themselves, and employers. Working beneficiaries may add an additional ABLE-to-Work contribution equal to the lesser of their prior year earned income or the federal poverty level for a one-person household (approximately $15,060 in 2026), but only if they do not contribute to an employer retirement plan.
Who qualifies for an ABLE account after SECURE 2.0?
Before SECURE 2.0 (December 2022), eligibility required disability onset before age 26. SECURE 2.0 raised this to age 46, effective January 1, 2026. So individuals who became disabled before their 46th birthday can now open an ABLE account, significantly expanding eligibility. The disability must meet Social Security's definition of disability or blindness, OR the individual must be receiving SSI or SSDI benefits. Self-certification is available for those not already receiving SSI/SSDI.
How does an ABLE account affect SSI and Medicaid?
SSI: The first $100,000 in an ABLE account is excluded from the $2,000 SSI resource limit. If the balance exceeds $100,000, SSI payments are suspended (not terminated) until the balance drops below $100,000. Medicaid: ABLE account assets are NEVER counted toward Medicaid eligibility, regardless of balance. This is one of the key benefits over a special needs trust. However, upon the beneficiary's death, some states can seek Medicaid payback from remaining ABLE funds (not the case for first-party special needs trusts in all situations).
What are qualified disability expenses (QDEs) for ABLE accounts?
Qualified disability expenses (QDEs) must be related to the disability and intended to improve health, independence, or quality of life. Categories include: education, housing, transportation, employment training, assistive technology, personal support services, health and wellness, legal fees, financial management, and other expenses approved by the Secretary of Treasury. Non-qualified withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income PLUS a 10% penalty on the earnings portion.
What is the difference between an ABLE account and a Special Needs Trust?
Key differences: (1) ABLE accounts can be self-controlled by the beneficiary; Special Needs Trusts (SNTs) require a trustee. (2) ABLE has a $100K SSI exemption; SNTs have no balance limit for SSI exemption but must be properly structured. (3) ABLE accounts are simpler and cheaper to establish and maintain. (4) SNTs can receive unlimited funds; ABLE is capped at $100K SSI-exempt plus state limits (often $300K-$500K). (5) Medicaid payback may apply to both upon death. For large assets, SNTs are often preferred; for everyday disability expenses, ABLE accounts are more practical.