Contribute Up to $72,000 Into a Self-Directed Roth IRA

If you are a high earner or serious retirement investor, the Mega Backdoor Roth remains one of the most powerful tax planning strategies available. In 2026, it allows you to move up to $72,000 into Roth retirement accounts, far beyond the regular Roth IRA limits.

This strategy is not automatic. It is not available in every plan. And it must be executed correctly. But when structured properly, it unlocks tax-free growth on tens of thousands of dollars beyond what traditional Roth contribution limits allow.

Let me walk you through exactly how it works.

What Is a Mega Backdoor Roth?

The Mega Backdoor Roth is a strategy that allows eligible retirement savers to convert large after-tax 401(k) or Solo 401(k) contributions into Roth accounts. Once in a Roth account, earnings grow tax free, and qualified withdrawals are tax free in retirement.

For 2026, standard Roth IRA contribution limits are $7,500 if under age 50 and $8,600 if age 50 or older. The Mega Backdoor Roth is different. It is tied to the total 401(k) contribution limit, which is $72,000 for 2026. This includes employer contributions, employee deferrals, and after-tax contributions.

Catch-up contributions do not increase the $72,000 annual additions limit under Internal Revenue Code Section 415(c). They apply only to traditional employee deferrals.

Mega Backdoor Roth Step by Step

1. Maximize Traditional Employee Deferrals First

For 2026, you can contribute up to $24,500 in elective deferrals to a 401(k) or Solo 401(k). If you are age 50 or older, you can contribute $32,500. If you are between ages 60 and 63, you can contribute $35,750.

These contributions can be pre-tax or Roth, depending on your election.

This step reduces taxable income if you choose pre-tax and lays the foundation for larger after-tax contributions.

2. Contribute After-Tax Dollars Up to the $72,000 Total Limit

The IRS allows total contributions of:

  • $72,000 if under age 50
  • $80,000 if age 50 or older
  • $83,250 if between ages 60 and 63

This total includes:

  • Pre-tax employee deferrals
  • Roth employee deferrals
  • Employer profit sharing contributions
  • After-tax contributions

The key to the Mega Backdoor Roth is maximizing the after-tax portion. These after-tax contributions are not limited by the $24,500 or $32,500 employee deferral cap.

For many high income earners, after-tax contributions represent tens of thousands of additional Roth eligible dollars.

3. In-Service Withdrawal or Conversion

After making after-tax contributions, you need a mechanism to move those dollars into Roth status.

This can be done through:

  • An in-service rollover to a Roth IRA
  • An in-plan conversion to a Roth 401(k), if permitted

This step transforms large after-tax amounts into tax-free Roth money.

Important: Earnings on after-tax contributions are generally taxable at conversion unless contributions are properly isolated from earnings.

4. Tax-Free Growth

Once the funds are inside a Roth IRA or Roth 401(k), all future earnings grow tax free. Qualified distributions are also tax free.

That is the real power of the Mega Backdoor Roth.

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Example 1: Self-Employed Individual Earning $100,000

Using a Solo 401(k) to Execute a Full Mega Backdoor Roth

Facts

  • Self-employed consultant under age 50
  • Net earned income of $100,000
  • Solo 401(k) allows after-tax contributions and Roth conversions
  • Goal is to maximize tax-free Roth savings

Breakdown

Total 2026 Solo 401(k) limit: $72,000

Employee deferral: Optional, up to $24,500

Employer contribution: Optional

After-tax contribution: The individual contributes the full $72,000 as after-tax contributions

Roth conversion:
The $72,000 is immediately converted in-plan to a Roth Solo 401(k) or rolled to a Self-Directed Roth IRA.

Tax Result

  • No tax deduction for the contribution
  • No tax on conversion because contributions were after-tax
  • All future growth is tax free

Distribution Rules

If over age 59½ and the Roth account has been open at least five years, all withdrawals are 100 percent tax free.

Key Takeaway

This investor moves $72,000 per year into Roth status. That far exceeds standard Roth IRA limits, using a properly designed Solo 401(k).

Example 2: Employee With a Side Business

Mega Backdoor Roth After Maxing Out an Employer 401(k)

Facts

  • W-2 employee earning $150,000
  • Already contributes $24,500 to employer 401(k)
  • Side consulting income of $50,000
  • Opens Solo 401(k) for side business

Critical Rule

Employee deferrals are aggregated across all 401(k) plans. However, the $72,000 total contribution limit applies separately to each unrelated employer.

Her employer’s 401(k) and her Solo 401(k) are considered separate employers.

Breakdown

Employer 401(k):
Employee deferral already used. No Mega Backdoor Roth option available.

Solo 401(k):

  • Employee deferral: $0
  • Employer contribution: Optional
  • After-tax contribution: Up to $50,000, limited by side business income

Roth conversion:
After-tax funds are converted to a Roth Solo 401(k) or rolled to a Self-Directed Roth IRA.

Tax Result

  • Contributions are after-tax
  • Conversion is tax free
  • Future earnings grow tax free

Why This Works

The Mega Backdoor Roth is not an employee deferral. It relies on after-tax contributions. Her Solo 401(k) has its own $72,000 limit.

Example 3: Age 55 Self-Employed Investor

Profile

  • Age 55
  • Self-employed
  • Earned income of $150,000
  • Solo 401(k) allows Roth deferrals, after-tax contributions, and Roth conversions

Step 1: Roth Employee Deferrals

Regular deferral: $24,500
Catch-up contribution: $8,000

Total Roth deferrals: $32,500

Only $24,500 counts toward the $72,000 annual additions limit. The $8,000 catch-up does not.

Step 2: Remaining Space

$72,000 annual additions limit
Minus $24,500 regular deferral
Remaining capacity: $47,500

Step 3: Mega Backdoor Roth Contribution

The individual contributes $47,500 as after-tax contributions.

Those funds are immediately converted in-plan or rolled to a Self-Directed Roth IRA.

Because the contributions were after-tax:

  • No tax on conversion
  • All future growth is tax free

Why These Examples Matter

Many investors assume:

“I already maxed out my 401(k), so I am done.”
“My income is too high for Roth strategies.”
“All 401(k) plans work the same.”

The Mega Backdoor Roth shows that none of these assumptions are always true. But the plan must be structured correctly.

Not All Plans Are Created Equal

The Mega Backdoor Roth requires specific plan features.

Many employer 401(k) plans do not allow:

  • After-tax contributions
  • In-service distributions
  • In-plan Roth conversions

Solo 401(k) and self-directed plans more commonly allow:

  • Flexible after-tax contributions
  • In-plan Roth conversions
  • Rollovers to a Roth IRA

Plan design is everything.

What You Need to Know in 2026

The 2026 defined contribution limit is $72,000 if under 50, $80,000 if age 50 or older, and $83,250 if between ages 60 and 63. This is the ceiling for total 401(k) contributions.

Catch-up contributions do not expand the Mega Backdoor Roth capacity under Section 415(c).

Timing and recordkeeping matter. Separating after-tax contributions from earnings and understanding when conversions are allowed is critical. Mistakes can create unnecessary tax liability.

Solo 401(k) and Self-Directed Advantage

A self-directed Solo 401(k) offers flexibility that most corporate plans simply do not.

You can:

  • Make after-tax contributions up to the total limit
  • Execute in-plan Roth conversions
  • Roll funds to a Roth IRA
  • Invest in alternative assets such as real estate or private equity

For many business owners, this structure makes the Mega Backdoor Roth possible.

Why IRA Financial Is the Mega Backdoor Roth Authority

When it comes to Solo 401(k) design, after-tax contribution structuring, and Mega Backdoor Roth execution, IRA Financial leads the industry.

We wrote the book on Solo 401(k) strategy. I am a tax attorney and CPA, and I authored one of the primary reference texts on Solo 401(k) plans and self-directed retirement planning.

We focus on compliance. Large contribution strategies require precision. Our Compliance Shield™ helps you:

  • Track contribution limits in real time
  • Navigate after-tax and Roth rules
  • Confirm eligibility for in-service distributions
  • Avoid costly tax mistakes

We specialize in self-directed retirement solutions built for flexibility and control.

Most important, we educate first. We empower you to:

  • Implement the Mega Backdoor Roth properly
  • Understand the tax implications
  • Integrate Roth strategies into your long-term retirement plan

Who Benefits Most?

The Mega Backdoor Roth is especially powerful for:

  • High income earners who exceed Roth IRA income limits
  • Business owners with Solo 401(k) plans
  • Individuals who already maximize traditional deferrals
  • Investors seeking Roth treatment for alternative assets

Final Takeaway

The Mega Backdoor Roth remains one of the most effective retirement tax strategies in 2026. But it is not one size fits all.

It requires:

  • A plan that permits after-tax contributions
  • A mechanism to convert those dollars to Roth
  • Careful attention to IRS contribution limits
  • Experienced guidance on compliance and timing

If you want to execute this strategy with confidence and unlock its full tax-free potential, work with a provider who understands these plans inside and out.

IRA Financial is not just another plan administrator. We are Solo 401(k) experts. With Compliance Shield™, a specialized self-directed platform, and decades of experience, we help investors turn complex retirement strategies into real, compliant results.

Adam Bergman - Founder

About the Author

Adam Bergman is a tax attorney and the founder of IRA Financial, one of the largest Self-Directed IRA platforms in the United States. He has helped more than 27,000 clients take control of their retirement savings, overseeing over $5 billion in retirement assets. Adam is also the author of nine books focused on helping investors understand and confidently manage their retirement strategies.