For a full breakdown of IRA and Roth IRA rules, contribution limits, and conversion strategies, see the IRA and Roth IRA hub.

-nan The backdoor Roth IRA is a legal strategy that lets high-income earners contribute to a Roth IRA—even when their income exceeds the direct contribution limits. Here’s exactly how it works.

2026 Roth IRA Income Limits

Filing Status Roth IRA Direct Contribution Phase-Out Range
Single Full contribution under $146,000 $146,000-$161,000
Married Filing Jointly Full contribution under $230,000 $230,000-$240,000
Married Filing Separately No direct contribution except a tiny amount $0-$10,000

If you earn above these limits, you cannot contribute directly to a Roth IRA. The backdoor strategy solves this.

How the Backdoor Roth IRA Works

Step-by-Step

Step Action Tax Impact
1 Contribute $7,000 to a traditional IRA (non-deductible) None—you don’t claim a deduction
2 Wait 1-2 business days (optional, but common) None
3 Convert the traditional IRA to a Roth IRA Tax on any growth during the brief holding period
4 File Form 8606 with your tax return Documents non-deductible basis

If you convert quickly (before any earnings), the tax owed is $0 or negligibly small.

Annual Limits

Category 2026 Limit
Backdoor Roth contribution $7,000 ($8,000 if 50+)
Mega backdoor Roth (after-tax 401k) Up to $23,500 additional*
Total possible Roth savings $30,500+ with both strategies

*Mega backdoor Roth depends on employer plan allowing after-tax contributions.

The Pro-Rata Rule (Critical!)

If you have any pre-tax money in IRAs (traditional, SEP, or SIMPLE), the conversion is prorated—you can’t convert only the non-deductible part.

Example With Pre-Tax IRA Money

Account Balance Type
Existing traditional IRA $93,000 Pre-tax (deductible)
New non-deductible contribution $7,000 After-tax (non-deductible)
Total IRA balance $100,000 93% pre-tax, 7% after-tax

Converting $7,000: 93% ($6,510) is taxable as ordinary income.

How to Fix It

Solution How It Works
Roll pre-tax IRA into employer 401(k) Removes pre-tax money from the equation
Roll pre-tax IRA into solo 401(k) Same—if you have self-employment income
Convert everything to Roth Pay tax on the full amount now

If you have $0 in pre-tax IRAs, the backdoor Roth is simple and nearly tax-free.

Mega Backdoor Roth

The mega backdoor Roth lets you save even more in a Roth account through your employer 401(k):

Requirement Details
Employer plan allows after-tax contributions Not all do—check with HR
Plan allows in-service withdrawals/conversions Must allow either in-plan Roth conversion or in-service distribution to Roth IRA
2026 total 401(k) limit $70,000 ($23,500 employee + employer match + after-tax)

Mega Backdoor Roth Example

Contribution Type Amount Tax Treatment
Regular 401(k) (pre-tax or Roth) $23,500 Tax-deferred or Roth
Employer match $10,000 Tax-deferred
After-tax contributions (mega backdoor) $36,500 Converted to Roth = tax-free growth
Total $70,000

Who Should Use the Backdoor Roth

Situation Backdoor Roth? Why
Income above Roth limits Yes Only way to access Roth
No pre-tax IRA balances Ideal candidate Clean conversion, minimal tax
Has pre-tax IRAs Maybe—fix pro-rata first Roll to 401(k), then proceed
Young high earner (long time horizon) Strongly yes Decades of tax-free growth
Near retirement Maybe Less time for tax-free growth
Employer offers mega backdoor Absolutely Additional $30K+ in Roth savings

The Bottom Line

The backdoor Roth IRA is a straightforward strategy for high earners to access Roth IRA benefits. Contribute $7,000 to a non-deductible traditional IRA, convert to Roth, and file Form 8606. The key pitfall is the pro-rata rule—make sure you have no pre-tax IRA money before converting. If your employer allows it, the mega backdoor Roth can add another $30,000+ to your Roth savings annually.

For more on Roth IRA strategy and rules, see the Roth IRA hub.

For more on Roth IRA strategy and rules, see the Roth IRA hub.

WealthVieu
Written by WealthVieu

WealthVieu researches and writes data-driven personal finance guides using primary sources including the IRS, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Federal Reserve, and Census Bureau.

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