Key Takeaways Starting in 2026, workers aged 50 and older earning over $145,000 will have to make 401(k) catch-up ...
If you're a high earner aged 50+ pulling in over $145,000, brace for impact: Pretax 401(k) catch-up contributions are vanishing next year.
Starting in 2026, extra catch-up contributions that those workers are allowed to make to 401 (k) plans will no longer be ...
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IRS rules now say 401(k) catch-ups for high earners have to be in a Roth. Is it still worth it?
Will workers earning more than $145,000 want to put those retirement contributions in a posttax Roth account? Their answer ...
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New rule: no Roth 401(k) means no catch-up contributions for wealthy workers
Starting 2026, high-income workers 50+ must make Roth 401(k) catch-up contributions under SECURE 2.0, losing pre-tax deductions but gaining potential long-term tax benefits.
The SECURE 2.0 Act is built on original 2019 legislation and includes more than 90 provisions designed to expand retirement ...
Under the SECURE 2.0 Act, employees between the ages of 60 and 63 will be allowed to make ‘super catch-up’ contributions to ...
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Will high earners over 50 lose their 401k tax break in 2026 as catch-up contributions shift to Roth?
Starting in 2026, high earners age 50 and older who earned more than $145,000 in the prior year will no longer be able to ...
Under incoming changes to the tax code, those age 50 and over who earn above a certain threshold will no longer be able to ...
Some older Americans will see a change in how they can make 401(k) catch-up contributions next year. Is there a catch?
Starting in 2026, high earners over the age of 50 must make 401(k) catch-ups after-tax. Savers may not be celebrating, but ...
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