P

Personal Finance

— Building wealth and financial literacy
54 members Created Apr 2026

How I use a single index fund and sleep fine at night

I want to share my experience with the mega backdoor Roth because the instructions online are often incomplete.

The mega backdoor Roth allows you to contribute up to $43,500 in after-tax contributions to a 401k (beyond the $23,000 standard limit) and then convert those to Roth. Not all 401k plans support this — it requires both the ability to make after-tax contributions and in-service withdrawals or in-plan Roth conversions.

Step 1: Confirm your plan allows after-tax contributions (check your Summary Plan Description or ask HR).
Step 2: Confirm in-plan Roth conversion is available, OR that in-service withdrawals to a Roth IRA are allowed.
Step 3: Elect to make after-tax contributions up to the combined limit ($66,000 total in 2024 including employer contributions).
Step 4: Immediately convert the after-tax contributions to Roth. Do this quickly to minimize taxable earnings on the after-tax money before conversion.

The tax impact: you pay no tax on the conversion if you convert immediately (the after-tax contributions have no growth yet). Any earnings before conversion are taxable.

This is the most tax-advantaged savings strategy available to high earners whose 401k plans support it.

19

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts.

Report thread

Why are you reporting this thread?