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Mega-Backdoor Roth: How Tech Employees Stash $46K+ More Per Year Tax-Free

If you work at Google, Meta, Apple, Nvidia, Microsoft, or most other major tech employers in the Bay Area, your 401(k) plan very likely supports the single most underused retirement tax strategy available to high-income employees: the mega-backdoor Roth. Used correctly, it lets you contribute up to an additional $46,500 per year on top of the regular $23,500 401(k) deferral cap, all of it growing tax-free for life.

Tech compensation packages routinely produce W-2 income well into six and sometimes seven figures. At those income levels, you cannot contribute directly to a Roth IRA (the contribution phases out completely above $165,000 of MAGI for single filers and $246,000 for joint filers in 2026), and traditional 401(k) deferrals are capped at $23,500. The mega-backdoor strategy is the legitimate workaround that the IRS has explicitly blessed since 2014, but only a fraction of eligible employees actually use it.

This guide explains the strategy, the 2026 numbers, the eligibility tests, the step-by-step execution, and the pitfalls that cost people their tax-free treatment. We work through this regularly with clients at our tax planning practice and with founders setting up plans through our bookkeeping and payroll team.

The 2026 Contribution Math

The IRS sets a combined annual cap on all 401(k) contributions — employee plus employer plus after-tax — at $70,000 for 2026 (or $77,500 if you are 50 or older). The mega-backdoor Roth fills the gap between your regular deferral and that ceiling.

2026 Limit Amount
Employee elective deferral (pre-tax or Roth) $23,500
Catch-up contribution (age 50+) $7,500
Total annual additions to a 401(k) (all sources) $70,000 (under 50) / $77,500 (50+)
Employer match (varies by plan) $0 to ~$11,250 typical at FAANG-tier plans
After-tax space available for mega-backdoor $70,000 − $23,500 − employer match

For a Google engineer with a 50% employer match capped at $11,250, the math works out to roughly $35,250 in after-tax space. For an employee at a plan with no match, it can be the full $46,500. Over a decade, that is half a million dollars of additional Roth principal, compounding tax-free.

What Is the Mega-Backdoor Roth?

The strategy uses three distinct buckets inside your 401(k):

  1. Pre-tax (or Roth) deferral — your standard $23,500 contribution, tax-advantaged either at contribution or withdrawal.
  2. Employer match — whatever your employer contributes on top.
  3. After-tax contributions — money you put in after you have already paid income tax on it. Not pre-tax. Not Roth. A third category that exists under IRC §415(c) as long as the plan permits it.

The after-tax bucket grows tax-deferred but is not Roth — without further action, the growth would be taxed as ordinary income at distribution. The mega-backdoor maneuver is the immediate conversion of the after-tax dollars (and any earnings) into Roth, either inside the plan (an "in-plan Roth conversion") or by rolling them out to a Roth IRA (an "in-service withdrawal"). Once converted, the dollars and all future growth are tax-free at qualified distribution.

Eligibility: Does Your Plan Actually Allow It?

The whole strategy hinges on two plan features. If your 401(k) plan document does not support both, the mega-backdoor is not available to you at this employer, period.

  1. After-tax contributions allowed. Most tech employer plans allow this; many smaller-employer plans do not. Check your plan's summary plan description or call the plan administrator.
  2. In-plan Roth conversions or in-service withdrawals. One of these must exist so you can move the after-tax money to Roth before earnings accrue. The best plans offer automatic daily conversions (Google, Meta, Microsoft, and several others do); the next-best offer manual periodic conversions; the least useful require you to wait until separation from service.

If both boxes are checked, you are good. If only the first is checked, the strategy still works but is meaningfully worse — you accrue ordinary-income tax liability on the after-tax growth between contribution and conversion.

The Step-by-Step Mechanics

  1. Hit your $23,500 deferral. Front-load early in the year if your employer offers true-up matching (so you do not lose match by maxing out by July). Without true-up, spread the deferral across the year to capture the full match.
  2. Calculate your after-tax space. $70,000 minus your deferral minus the expected full-year employer match equals your after-tax contribution limit. Update mid-year if your salary or bonus changes.
  3. Elect after-tax contributions through your plan's portal. A separate election from pre-tax/Roth. Most plans let you set this as a percentage of paycheck.
  4. Convert immediately. If your plan offers automatic daily conversion, you are done. Otherwise, set a calendar reminder (monthly or quarterly) to manually request the conversion via the plan portal.
  5. Verify the 1099-R at year-end. Conversions show up as 1099-R distributions. Make sure box 5 (employee contributions/Roth basis) matches your after-tax contribution amount so the conversion is reported correctly.

The Tax Treatment, Step by Step

The mega-backdoor produces three tax events, two of which are non-events if you execute promptly:

  • At contribution. You contribute after-tax dollars. Already taxed. No deduction. No further tax impact today.
  • At conversion. The principal converts tax-free (it was already taxed). Any earnings between contribution and conversion convert as ordinary income that year. With same-day or daily automatic conversion, earnings are typically zero or pennies.
  • At distribution in retirement. Qualified Roth distributions are 100% tax-free. The earnings on potentially decades of compounding never get taxed.
Example. A 35-year-old engineer earns $400,000 base, has a Google-tier plan with full automatic conversion, and runs the mega-backdoor for $40,000 per year for 25 years to age 60. At a 7% real return, that $1 million of after-tax contributions becomes roughly $2.7 million of Roth balance. The $1.7 million of growth is never taxed. At a 32% marginal rate in retirement (or higher), that is over $540,000 of avoided tax.

Common Pitfalls

  1. Plan does not allow after-tax contributions. No workaround. Your only options are the regular $23,500, employer match, HSA (if available), backdoor Roth IRA ($7,000), and taxable accounts.
  2. Plan allows after-tax but not in-service conversion. Earnings accrue as future ordinary income. Some still pursue the strategy because the deferral is valuable, but the math is much weaker. Talk to a tax advisor before relying on this variant.
  3. Delaying conversion. Every dollar of earnings between contribution and conversion becomes taxable when you finally convert. Daily automatic conversion is the gold standard. Quarterly conversions usually produce trivial tax. Annual conversions can produce thousands.
  4. Pro-rata rule for separate backdoor Roth IRA. The mega-backdoor (inside the 401(k)) is generally not affected by the pro-rata rule. The regular backdoor Roth IRA (a separate strategy using a non-deductible traditional IRA contribution and conversion) IS subject to pro-rata aggregation of all your traditional IRAs. If you have a rollover IRA with pre-tax money, the regular backdoor Roth produces ordinary-income tax on the proportional pre-tax balance. The fix is rolling pre-tax IRAs back into your current 401(k) before converting, if your plan allows.
  5. Job change mid-year. The $70,000 limit is per-employer per-plan, not per-person. If you leave Google for Meta in July, you potentially have a fresh $70,000 of room at Meta on top of what you already used at Google. Plan accordingly.
  6. Excess contributions. Going over $70,000 in total annual additions triggers a 6% excise tax until corrected. Track your employer match carefully — true-up payments at year-end can push you over.
  7. Reporting mistakes on Form 1099-R. Many plans report mega-backdoor conversions in box 1 (gross distribution) and box 2a (taxable amount). If box 2a is wrong, your tax software will overstate the income. Reconcile against your plan statements.

Mega-Backdoor Roth vs. the Other Roth Strategies

Strategy 2026 Annual Limit Best For
Direct Roth IRA $7,000 ($8,000 age 50+) Lower-income years; under MAGI phase-out
Backdoor Roth IRA (non-deductible TIRA + conversion) $7,000 ($8,000 age 50+) High earners over the Roth IRA MAGI limit; no pre-tax IRA balance
Roth 401(k) deferral $23,500 ($31,000 age 50+) Anyone in or near the highest brackets expecting equal-or-higher rates in retirement
Mega-Backdoor Roth Up to $46,500 Tech employees with plans that allow after-tax + in-service conversion
Roth conversion (existing TIRA/401k → Roth) Unlimited; full balance taxed at conversion Low-income transition years; early retirement bridge planning

The mega-backdoor is uniquely powerful because it stacks on top of the other limits and avoids the income phase-outs that block the direct Roth IRA. For a high-W-2 tech employee, it is often the single largest tax-advantaged retirement bucket available.

Action Items

  • Pull your plan's Summary Plan Description. Confirm in writing whether after-tax contributions and in-plan Roth conversions (or in-service withdrawals) are permitted.
  • Run the after-tax space math for the calendar year. Update mid-year if your salary or bonus changes.
  • Enable automatic conversion if available. If your plan only offers manual, set a recurring quarterly reminder.
  • Coordinate with the regular backdoor Roth IRA if you do both. Watch the pro-rata aggregation rule on traditional IRAs.
  • Verify your 1099-R every January. Conversion reporting errors at the plan are common and you have to catch them.
  • Talk to a tax advisor before a job change if you plan to run the strategy at both employers in the same year.

When to Talk to Us

The mega-backdoor Roth pairs naturally with the other equity and income strategies tech employees deal with: ISO/NSO exercise planning, RSU vesting, AMT exposure, and proactive Roth-vs-pre-tax allocation across the household. We help clients model the right mix — including whether the regular backdoor Roth IRA still makes sense alongside the mega — and review plan documents to confirm what is actually allowed.

If you have not been running the mega-backdoor at all, every year of unused space is permanently gone. The right time to start is the next paycheck. Schedule a free consultation and we can walk through your specific plan, run the after-tax space math, and map a multi-year contribution and conversion strategy.

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