401(k) Limits 2026: How Much Can You Really Put In?

The IRS has increased the limits again to keep up with inflation. Here is the breakdown of the maximum amounts for employees, employers, and those over age 50.

BMT Tax Research Team BMT Tax Research Team · 📅 Jan 2026 · ⏱️ 3 min read · TAX-TIPS › RETIREMENT
Under 50
$24,000
Employee MaxStandard
Age 50+
$31,500
Incl. Catch-UpBonus
Total Limit
$70,000+
You + CompanyCombined

The Official 2026 Limits

There are two main buckets: what you put in (Elective Deferral) and the total pot (including company money).

Category Under 50 Age 50+
Employee Limit $24,000 $24,000
Catch-Up Contribution $0 +$7,500
Your Max Payment $24,000 $31,500
Total (Combined) $70,000 $77,500
Combined Limit?
The “Total” includes your $24k + Employer Match + Profit Sharing. Even if your boss gives you huge bonuses, the account cannot exceed $70,000/year total.
The “Free Money” Stack
Employer Match $5,000
Example: 50% match on first 4%.
Your Contribution $24,000
Pre-tax deduction from paycheck.
Tax Savings ~$5,280
Deferred tax (22% bracket).
PriorityAction
1. MatchMust Do
2. Max OutGoal

Traditional 401(k) vs. Roth 401(k)

Most companies now offer both. The contribution limits ($24,000) are shared between them. You cannot put $24k in each.

Feature Traditional 401(k) Roth 401(k)
Tax Break Now (Lowers Taxable Income) Later (Tax-Free Withdrawal)
Best For High Earners (Peak Career) Young Earners (Low Bracket)
Employer Match Goes here (Taxable) Can go here (Taxable*)

*New rules (SECURE Act 2.0) allow employers to put matching funds into Roth accounts, but it is taxable income for you immediately.

The Best Order to Invest

Do not blindly max out your 401(k) if you have high-interest debt. Follow this “Financial Order of Operations.”

  • Step 1: Contribute enough to get the Employer Match. (It’s a 100% return).
  • Step 2: Pay off high-interest debt (Credit Cards > 6%).
  • Step 3: Max out a Roth IRA ($7,500) for better fund choices.
  • Step 4: Go back and finish maxing out the 401(k).

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I contribute to both a 401(k) and an IRA?
Yes! You can put $24,000 into your 401(k) AND $7,500 into your Roth IRA in the same year. They are separate buckets.
What if I change jobs?
The limit applies to YOU, not the employer. If you contributed $10k at Job A, you can only contribute $14k at Job B for the rest of the year.