The post SECURE 2.0 Forces High Earners Born in 1976 and Earlier Into Roth Catch-Ups Starting in 2026 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
If you turned 50 this year, earn solidly into six figures, and have always treated your 401(k) catch-up as a pretax tax shelter, the rules just changed on you. Starting in 2026, the SECURE 2.0 Act forces older high earners to route every dollar of catch-up money into a Roth 401(k), giving up the upfront deduction in exchange for tax-free withdrawals later. For workers born in 1976 or earlier who cleared the wage threshold last year, the deduction you have been counting on is gone.
Picture a 50-year-old earning $185,000 in W-2 wages, planning to max her 401(k) at $24,500 plus an $8,000 catch-up, for a total of $32,500. Under the old rules, that full amount would have dropped her taxable income. Under the new rules, the catch-up piece must go to Roth.
This is the exact concern surfacing in the press and on retirement forums right now. A January New York Times Your Money Adviser column quoted CPA Miklos Ringbauer calling the shift “a major change for a lot of people”, and noted that affected workers “won’t get an upfront tax break for the extra contributions”.
The facts of the scenario at a glance:
The whole tension here is taxes now versus taxes later. At a 24% federal bracket, deducting an $8,000 traditional catch-up used to save about $1,900 in federal tax in the year of contribution. That deduction is now off the table. The $8,000 goes in after tax, so take-home pay falls by roughly that $1,900.
Workers age 60 to 63 feel it harder. The super catch-up is $11,250 in 2026, pushing the total possible 401(k) contribution to $35,750. Routing that through Roth instead of pretax raises a 24% bracket filer’s federal tax by about $2,700.
The upside is real, if not immediate. Roth dollars grow and come out tax-free after 59 and a half, with no required minimum distributions.
Pull your 2025 W-2 and look at Box 3, Social Security wages. That number, not your gross or 1099 income, decides whether the Roth rule applies to you in 2026. Then confirm in writing that your plan accepts Roth catch-ups, and whether contributions above the standard limit auto-route to Roth or require an election.
The common mistake right now is treating the change as a reason to skip the catch-up. Walking away from $8,000 of tax-advantaged space to avoid roughly $1,900 of current-year tax leaves a lot of compounding on the table. The deduction is gone, but the tax shelter itself remains intact.
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The post SECURE 2.0 Forces High Earners Born in 1976 and Earlier Into Roth Catch-Ups Starting in 2026 appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


