Roth IRA Contribution Limits 2026: How Much Can You Add?

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Retirement & Pension

Roth IRA Contribution Limits 2026: How Much Can You Add?

June 28, 2026

For 2026 you can contribute up to $7,500 to a Roth IRA, or $8,600 if you’re 50 or older — combined across all of your IRAs. The catch is income: high earners may be limited or shut out entirely based on their modified adjusted gross income. Here are the exact 2026 numbers, the phase-out ranges by filing status, the deadline, and what to do if you earn too much.

Quick answer: The 2026 Roth IRA contribution limit is $7,500 (or $8,600 if you’re 50+), combined across all your IRAs. You can contribute the full amount if your income (MAGI) is under $153,000 single or $242,000 married filing jointly; eligibility phases out above those and ends at $168,000 / $252,000. You have until about April 15, 2027 to contribute for 2026.

  • $7,500 Base limit, under 50
  • $8,600 With catch-up, age 50+
  • Apr 15, 2027 Deadline for 2026

2026 Roth IRA Contribution Limits

For the 2026 tax year, the most you can put into a Roth IRA is $7,500 if you’re under 50, or $8,600 if you’re 50 or older by the end of the year. The extra $1,100 for older savers is the catch-up contribution, and 2026 is the first year it has risen above $1,000.

One point trips people up constantly: this is a combined limit across all of your IRAs, not a limit per account. If you have both a Roth IRA and a Traditional IRA, $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) is the total you can split between them — not $7,500 each. (Deciding which to fund is a separate question; see Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA compared.)

You also need earned income — wages, salary, tips, self-employment income — at least equal to what you contribute. Investment income, Social Security, and rental income don’t count. If you don’t have earned income but your spouse does, a spousal IRA lets you contribute based on the working spouse’s earnings (the household’s combined contributions can’t exceed its earned income).

2026 Roth IRA contribution limits vs. 2025
Age group 2025 limit 2026 limit
Under 50 $7,000 $7,500
50 or older $8,000 $8,600
Catch-up portion (50+) $1,000 $1,100
Combined across all of your IRAs. Limits are not prorated by when in the year you contribute.

2026 Roth IRA Income Limits (Phase-Outs)

This is where most people get tripped up. Even if you have earned income, your ability to contribute directly to a Roth IRA shrinks and then disappears once your income climbs past a threshold. The IRS measures this with your modified adjusted gross income (MAGI) — roughly your adjusted gross income with a few deductions (like student-loan interest) added back. For most people, MAGI is very close to their AGI.

Your filing status sets the range. Below the bottom of the range you can contribute the full amount. Inside the range you’re in the partial zone — you can still contribute, but a reduced amount that gets smaller as your income rises. At or above the top, your direct contribution limit is $0.

2026 Roth IRA income limits by filing status (modified AGI)
Filing status Full contribution Partial (phase-out) No direct contribution
Single or head of household MAGI under $153,000 $153,000 – $168,000 $168,000 or more
Married filing jointly MAGI under $242,000 $242,000 – $252,000 $252,000 or more
Married filing separately* Not available $0 – $10,000 $10,000 or more
*Applies if you’re married filing separately and lived with your spouse at any point during the year. If you filed separately and did not live together at all that year, you use the single thresholds instead.

So the short version of “do I make too much?”: if you’re single, you lose access to direct Roth contributions once your MAGI reaches $168,000; married filing jointly, the cutoff is $252,000. If you’re inside the range, you’re not shut out — you just can’t put in the full $7,500/$8,600. And if you’re over the top, the backdoor Roth may still be on the table.

Who Can Contribute to a Roth IRA?

Three conditions decide whether you can contribute directly:

  • You have earned income. Wages, salary, tips, bonuses, commissions, and self-employment income all count. Earnings from investments, pensions, Social Security, and rental property do not.
  • Your income is below the phase-out ceiling for your filing status (see the table above).
  • There’s no age limit. You can contribute at any age — even past 73 — as long as you have earned income. Roth IRAs also have no required minimum distributions for the original owner.

A common question: can I contribute to a Roth IRA if I make $200,000 or $300,000? If you’re single, $200,000 is above the $168,000 ceiling, so no direct contribution — but you can use the backdoor. At $300,000, you’re over the cutoff for every filing status, so a direct Roth contribution is off the table; again, the backdoor is the workaround. If you’re married filing jointly and your combined MAGI is, say, $230,000, you’re still under the $242,000 line and can contribute fully.

Don’t have earned income yourself but your spouse does? A spousal IRA lets you contribute based on the working spouse’s earnings. And if you’re self-employed and want to save more than the IRA limit allows, look at a Solo 401(k), which has much higher caps.

Catch-Up: Limits if You’re 50 or Older

If you turn 50 or older at any point in 2026, you can add a $1,100 catch-up contribution on top of the base $7,500 — for a total of $8,600. The catch-up applies per person, so a married couple who are both 50+ can each contribute $8,600 (income permitting).

Why the bump? The IRA catch-up amount sat at $1,000 from 2006 onward because it wasn’t indexed for inflation. The SECURE 2.0 Act changed that, adding annual inflation indexing (rounded to the nearest $100). 2026 is the first year that indexing pushed it over the line — making this the catch-up’s first increase in two decades.

The 2026 Roth IRA Contribution Deadline

You don’t have to fund your 2026 Roth IRA during the 2026 calendar year. The deadline to contribute for 2026 is the federal tax-filing deadline — about April 15, 2027. That gives you a useful overlap window: in early 2027, you can still make 2026 contributions right up until you file.

The same overlap works for the current cycle: contributions for the 2025 tax year are due by about April 15, 2026. Just be sure to tell your provider which tax year a contribution is for, since early-year deposits can be applied to either.

One thing the deadline doesn’t change: the limit is not prorated. Whether you contribute in January or the following April, you can still put in the full $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) for the year.

Earn Too Much? The Backdoor Roth IRA

If your income is over the phase-out ceiling, you’re locked out of direct Roth contributions — but not out of a Roth entirely. The backdoor Roth IRA is a legal, well-established workaround, and it has no income limit.

This is an overview, not a step-by-step — the mechanics and the pro-rata math are worth getting right. Our Roth vs. Traditional IRA guide walks through the backdoor in more detail. When in doubt, a quick check with a tax advisor before you convert can save a real headache.

Common Roth IRA Contribution Mistakes

A few errors come up again and again. The good news: most are easy to avoid, and the rest are fixable if you catch them in time.

Contributing more than the limit

Putting in more than allowed — or contributing when your income made you ineligible — triggers a 6% excise tax on the excess, charged every year until you fix it. The fix is straightforward if you act before your tax-filing deadline: withdraw the excess amount plus any earnings it generated. Do that in time and you avoid the penalty entirely. (If you only catch it later, you may owe the 6% for the year, but you can still correct it going forward.)

Contributing without earned income

You can’t fund a Roth IRA with investment gains, Social Security, or rental income alone — you need earned income at least equal to your contribution. The exception is the spousal IRA, which lets a non-earning spouse contribute on the working spouse’s earnings.

Over-contributing across multiple IRAs

Because the limit is combined, holding several IRAs at different providers makes it easy to overshoot. $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) is your total across every Roth and Traditional IRA you own — track the sum, not each account.

Confusing IRA limits with 401(k) limits

These are entirely separate buckets, and the 401(k) limits are far higher. You can max out both in the same year. Don’t let the bigger 401(k) number make you think you can put more into your IRA.

IRA vs. 401(k) contribution limits, 2026
Account 2026 limit (under 50) Catch-up (50+) Total (50+)
Roth / Traditional IRA $7,500 $1,100 $8,600
401(k) employee deferral $24,500 $8,000 $32,500
A higher 401(k) catch-up of $11,250 applies to those aged 60–63. See our 2026 401(k) contribution limits guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Roth IRA contribution limit for 2026?
$7,500 if you’re under 50, or $8,600 if you’re 50 or older — combined across all of your IRAs, and only if you have at least that much in earned income.
What are the 2026 Roth IRA income limits?
Direct contributions phase out between $153,000 and $168,000 of MAGI for single filers and heads of household, and between $242,000 and $252,000 for married couples filing jointly. Married filing separately (if you lived with your spouse) phases out from $0 to $10,000.
How much can I contribute to a Roth IRA if I’m over 50?
Up to $8,600 for 2026 — the $7,500 base plus a $1,100 catch-up contribution. It’s a per-person amount, so each spouse who’s 50+ can contribute $8,600 if income allows.
Can I contribute to a Roth IRA if I make $200,000 or $300,000?
Directly, it depends on your filing status. A single filer at $200,000 or $300,000 is over the $168,000 ceiling, so no direct contribution. A married couple filing jointly is fine until $242,000 and shut out at $252,000. If you’re over the line, the backdoor Roth has no income limit.
At what income can you no longer contribute to a Roth IRA?
Once your 2026 MAGI hits $168,000 (single/head of household) or $252,000 (married filing jointly), your direct contribution limit drops to $0.
What are the 2026 limits for married filing jointly?
Each spouse can contribute up to $7,500 ($8,600 if 50+) as long as combined MAGI is under $242,000. Between $242,000 and $252,000 the amount is reduced; at $252,000 or above, direct contributions aren’t allowed.
What is the deadline to contribute for 2026?
About April 15, 2027 — the federal tax-filing deadline for the 2026 tax year. You can make 2026 contributions any time during 2026 and into early 2027 up to that date.
Can I contribute to both a Roth and a Traditional IRA?
Yes, but the $7,500 / $8,600 limit is the combined total across both, not per account. You can split it however you like (subject to the Roth income rules).
Is there an age limit to contribute to a Roth IRA?
No. You can contribute at any age as long as you have earned income, and Roth IRAs have no required minimum distributions for the original owner.
What happens if I contribute more than the limit?
Excess contributions are hit with a 6% excise tax for each year they stay in the account. Withdraw the excess (plus any earnings) before your tax-filing deadline to avoid the penalty.
Do Roth IRA limits include my 401(k)?
No. IRA and 401(k) limits are completely separate. For 2026 you can contribute up to $7,500/$8,600 to your IRAs and up to $24,500 (plus catch-up) to a 401(k).
What if I earn too much — what is a backdoor Roth IRA?
It’s contributing to a non-deductible Traditional IRA and then converting it to a Roth. There’s no income limit on this strategy, though the pro-rata rule can create a tax bill if you hold other pre-tax IRA money. See the backdoor Roth section above.

Last updated: . Re-verify all figures at the start of each tax year.

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