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Mega Backdoor Roth Calculator

Calculate your after-tax 401(k) contribution room and compare Roth vs. taxable growth over time.

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e.g. 50% means employer matches $0.50 per $1.00

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Max % of salary the employer will match on

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After-Tax Contribution Room

$44,000

per year available for mega backdoor Roth

Employee Deferral

$20,000

Pre-tax/Roth 401(k)

Employer Match

$6,000

Free money

Total Tax-Advantaged

$70,000

Per year

Roth Advantage

$474,253

Over 25 years vs. taxable

How to Use This Calculator

First, confirm your 401(k) plan allows after-tax contributions and in-plan Roth conversions. Then enter your salary, deferral rate, and employer match details. The calculator shows your available after-tax contribution room and projects the long-term advantage of investing that amount in a Roth vs. a taxable brokerage account.

What Is the Mega Backdoor Roth?

The standard 401(k) employee deferral limit is $23,500 in 2025. But the IRS §415(c) total contribution limit — which includes employee deferrals, employer match, and after-tax contributions — is $70,000. The gap between your deferrals plus match and the $70,000 ceiling is your mega backdoor Roth opportunity.

By making after-tax contributions to your 401(k) and immediately converting them to Roth (either in-plan or by rolling to a Roth IRA), you effectively get Roth treatment on contributions far beyond the normal limits. The key requirement is that your plan must support both after-tax contributions and in-plan Roth conversions or in-service distributions.

How It Works

The calculation has three components. First, your employee deferral: your salary times your deferral rate, capped at the §402(g) limit. Second, your employer match: the employer's matching contribution on the portion of salary they match. Third, the after-tax room: the §415(c) total limit minus your deferral minus the employer match.

The chart compares investing that after-tax room in a Roth account (tax-free growth, tax-free withdrawals) versus a taxable brokerage account (annual capital gains tax drag of ~0.5%, plus 15% LTCG at withdrawal). Over decades of compounding, the tax-free growth advantage is substantial.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a mega backdoor Roth?

A strategy using after-tax 401(k) contributions (beyond the standard limit) converted to Roth, letting you contribute up to the §415(c) total limit ($70,000 in 2025) to tax-advantaged accounts.

How much can I contribute?

Your room = §415(c) limit ($70,000) minus employee deferrals minus employer match. With $23,500 deferrals and $6,000 match, that's $40,500 in after-tax room.

Does my plan support this?

Your plan needs after-tax contributions and either in-plan Roth conversions or in-service distributions. Check with your plan administrator.

What's the advantage over taxable?

Roth grows tax-free. Taxable accounts face ~0.5%/year tax drag plus 15% LTCG at withdrawal. Over 25-30 years this compounds into hundreds of thousands in savings.

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Methodology & Assumptions

Uses 2025 IRS contribution limits. The taxable projection applies 0.5% annual tax drag (capital gains distributions) and 15% LTCG tax on gains at withdrawal. Roth grows with no tax drag and no withdrawal tax.

This tool provides estimates for educational purposes. It is not financial advice. Consult a fee-only financial planner for your specific situation.