401k Max Contribution Limits 2026 – Complete Guide with Catch-Up
Calculate 401k maximum contribution limits for 2026 including catch-up contributions, employer match limits, and total annual limits for all ages.
401k Max Contribution Limits 2026 – Complete Guide
Introduction
2026 401(k) Contribution Limits:
- Employee: $23,500 (up from $23,000 in 2025)
- Catch-Up (age 50+): $7,500
- Total Employee (50+): $31,000
- Combined (Employee + Employer): $70,000 (or $77,500 age 50+)
The 401k Max Calculator ensures you're maximizing tax-advantaged savings.
Employee Contribution Limits
Under Age 50: $23,500 Age 50+: $31,000 ($23,500 + $7,500 catch-up) Age 60-63 (NEW for 2026): $34,500 ($23,500 + $11,000 enhanced catch-up)
Per-Paycheck Calculation:
- Monthly: $23,500 / 12 = $1,958
- Bi-weekly (26 pays): $23,500 / 26 = $904
- Bi-monthly (24 pays): $23,500 / 24 = $979
Total Annual Limit (Employee + Employer)
Under 50: $70,000 Age 50+: $77,500 Age 60-63: $81,000
Includes:
- Your contributions
- Employer match
- Employer profit-sharing
- After-tax contributions (if plan allows)
Example:
- You contribute: $23,500
- Employer match (5%): $5,000
- Profit sharing: $10,000
- Total: $38,500 (under $70k limit) ✅
Mega Backdoor Roth Strategy
If your plan allows after-tax contributions:
Limit: $70,000 total - (your $23,500 + employer match)
Example:
- Your pre-tax: $23,500
- Employer match: $5,000
- Remaining room: $70,000 - $28,500 = $41,500
- Contribute $41,500 after-tax
- Immediately convert to Roth (Mega Backdoor Roth)
- Total Roth IRA equivalent: $41,500/year
Requirements:
- Plan allows after-tax contributions
- Plan allows in-service withdrawals or conversions
Timing Your Contributions
Front-Loading:
- Max out by June
- Captures more market exposure early
- Risk: Miss out on employer match if not paid per-paycheck
Spread Evenly:
- $1,958/month
- Ensures you don't miss match due to hitting limit early
- Safer for most people
Employer Match Example:
- Contribute $23,500 all in Jan-June
- Employer matches 5% per paycheck
- July-Dec: You contribute $0 → No match!
- Lost: ~$2,500 in free money
Solution: Check if employer does "true-up" (makeup match at year-end)
Income Limits? NONE!
Unlike IRAs, 401(k) has NO income limit
Roth IRA: Phased out at $150k (single), $236k (married) 401(k): No limit—CEO making $5M can still contribute $23,500
This is WHY high earners love 401(k)s.
Catch-Up Contributions
Age 50-59 & 64+: +$7,500/year Age 60-63 (NEW): +$11,000/year
Enhanced Catch-Up Justification:
- Final push before retirement
- Kids out of college (hopefully)
- Peak earning years
Example: Age 61, max out enhanced catch-up
- Regular: $23,500
- Enhanced catch-up: $11,000
- Total: $34,500/year
Over 4 years (60-63): Extra $14,000 saved vs. regular catch-up
Roth 401(k) Limits
Same limits as traditional 401(k)
- Roth 401(k): $23,500 (or $31,000 with catch-up)
- Can split between traditional and Roth
- Combined cannot exceed limit
Example:
- $15,000 Roth 401(k)
- $8,500 Traditional 401(k)
- Total: $23,500 ✅
Highly Compensated Employee (HCE) Rules
If you earn \u003e $155,000 (2026): Classified as HCE
Implications:
- May face lower contribution limits if plan fails non-discrimination testing
- Refunds possible if non-HCEs don't contribute enough
Solution: Encourage lower-paid employees to contribute (benefits everyone)
Self-Employed / Solo 401(k)
Different Calculation:
Employee contribution: $23,500 (or $31k with catch-up)
Employer contribution: Up to 25% of compensation
Total limit: $70,000 (or $77,500 age 50+)
Example: Self-employed income $200k
- Employee: $23,500
- Employer (25% of $200k*): $50,000
- Total: $70,000 maxed ✅
*Actual calculation is more complex (based on net self-employment income minus half SE tax)
FAQ
Q: Can I contribute to 401k and IRA in same year? A: Yes. Separate limits. $23,500 (401k) + $7,000 (IRA) = $30,500 total.
Q: What if I change jobs mid-year? A: Limits follow YOU, not employer. If you contributed $15k at Job 1, can only contribute $8,500 at Job 2.
Q: What if I over-contribute? A: Must withdraw excess + earnings by April 15. Otherwise, double-taxed (tax now + again at withdrawal).
Q: Do employer matches count toward my $23,500 limit? A: No. Employer match is separate—only counts toward $70k combined limit.
Q: Can my employer force me to contribute? A: No, but some have auto-enrollment (can opt out).
Related Calculators
- Retirement Savings: /calculator/02-retirement-savings-calculator
- Roth vs Traditional: /calculator/roth-vs-traditional-calculator
Conclusion
Max your 401(k) if you can. It's the single best tax-advantaged savings vehicle for high earners. $23,500/year for 30 years = $2.6M+ (at 7% returns).
Use the 401k Max Calculator to determine your per-paycheck contribution to hit the limit exactly. Don't leave free money (employer match) or tax savings on the table.