Calculate gender and racial pay gap impact over a career. See lifetime earnings differences, retirement savings gaps, and Social Security impact based on US wage data.
The US Pay Gap Calculator quantifies the financial impact of wage disparities based on gender and race over an entire career. Using current Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) data, this tool shows how cents-on-the-dollar differences compound into significant lifetime earnings gaps, reduced retirement savings, and lower Social Security benefits.
According to the most recent BLS data, women working full-time earn approximately 84 cents for every dollar earned by men. The gap is wider for women of color: Black women earn about 70 cents and Hispanic women about 65 cents per dollar earned by white men. While the gap has narrowed over decades, progress has been slow, and understanding the cumulative financial impact motivates policy discussions and personal financial planning.
This calculator goes beyond the headline statistic to show year-by-year earnings accumulation, the compound effect on retirement savings (with investment growth), the impact on Social Security benefits, and how many additional working days per year would be needed to earn the same amount. It helps visualize an abstract percentage as a concrete dollar amount.
Use this calculator when you want to translate a pay-ratio statistic into actual lost earnings, retirement impact, and long-run career differences. It is useful for compensation analysis, policy discussions, and showing how a small annual percentage gap compounds over decades. The output also helps turn a percentage into a concrete dollar figure that is easier to compare across scenarios.
Annual gap = salary × (1 − payRatio). Lifetime gap = annualGap × careerYears. Retirement gap = sum of (annualSavings × payRatio × (1 + returnRate)^yearsRemaining) vs. full savings. SS gap ≈ annual gap × SS_replacement_rate. Extra work days = 365 × (1 − payRatio) / payRatio.
Result: Lifetime gap: $384,000; Retirement savings gap: ~$198,000 (at 7% return)
At $60,000, 84 cents on the dollar means earning $50,400 — a $9,600 annual gap. Over 40 years: $384,000. With 10% savings rate and 7% compound returns, retirement savings lag by ~$198,000.
A 16% annual pay gap might seem modest, but compound effects make it devastating over a career. A woman earning $50,400 instead of $60,000 loses $9,600 per year in income, but also contributes $960 less per year to retirement savings (at 10% rate). Over 40 years with 7% returns, that retirement savings gap alone grows to nearly $200,000. Add reduced Social Security benefits (based on lifetime earnings), and the total lifetime financial impact often exceeds $1 million.
The gender pay gap narrowed significantly from 1980-2000, driven by women's increased education, workforce participation, and anti-discrimination legislation. However, progress has stalled since 2005—at the current rate of closure, the gap won't close until approximately 2088 for all women, with even longer timelines for women of color. Understanding both progress and remaining challenges is important for informed policy discussions.
The pay gap is not uniform—it varies dramatically at the intersection of gender, race, age, education, and geography. A college-educated white woman in tech faces a different gap than a Hispanic woman in service work. This calculator helps explore these intersections by allowing custom pay ratios, revealing how multiple factors compound to create larger disparities for some groups.
According to BLS data, women earn approximately 83.7 cents per dollar earned by men for full-time workers. This has improved from 62 cents in 1979 but progress has plateaued in recent years.
The raw gap compares all full-time workers regardless of occupation. The "adjusted" or "controlled" gap—comparing similar jobs, experience, and education—is smaller (about 95-99 cents) but still present, and the factors driving job differences are themselves partly caused by discrimination.
Compared to white men's dollar: Asian women earn ~92¢, white women ~84¢, Black women ~70¢, Native American women ~65¢, Hispanic women ~65¢ (BLS data). The intersection of gender and race compounds the gap.
Lower earnings mean lower contributions to 401(k)/IRA accounts AND lower employer matches. With compound interest over 40 years, even small annual differences grow to six-figure retirement gaps. Social Security benefits, based on lifetime earnings, are also permanently reduced.
Equal Pay Day marks how far into the new year women must work to earn what men earned the previous year. For all women it falls in mid-March; for Black women in September; for Latina women in October.
The raw pay gap is a well-documented statistical fact. Debate exists about causes: some cite occupational differences and hours worked, while others note these factors are themselves influenced by systemic barriers, discrimination, and cultural expectations.