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Why catch-up matters for immigrants: Many ITIN holders start saving late (no access to accounts in their 20s-30s, lower early income, etc.). Catch-up contributions let you compress a decade of savings into your final working years. Turn 50 and unlock $8,000 extra per year. Turn 60 and unlock $11,250 extra.

2026 Catch-Up Limits at a Glance

Age Group Annual Limit What This Adds
Under 50 $24,500 Base limit only
Age 50–59, 64+ $32,500 +$8,000 catch-up
Age 60–63 (new) $35,750 +$11,250 super catch-up

The Standard Catch-Up: Age 50 and Older

How Much Extra Can You Contribute?

Once you turn 50, you can contribute an additional $8,000 per year to your 401(k), bringing your total from $24,500 to $32,500. That's $667/month in catch-up contributions alone.

What It Means in 30 Years

If you're 50 and contribute an extra $8,000/year for 15 years (until 65) at 7% annual growth, that $120,000 in extra contributions grows to $287,000. That's the power of compound growth in your final working years.

Who Qualifies?

You must be 50 years old by December 31 of the plan year. If you turn 50 on December 31, 2026, you qualify for catch-up contributions starting in 2027 (the plan year that includes when you turned 50).

ITIN Holders and Catch-Up Eligibility

ITIN holders are fully eligible for catch-up contributions. Your immigration status does not affect age-based eligibility. If you're 50+ and your employer offers a 401(k), you can contribute the full catch-up amount.

The Super Catch-Up: Ages 60–63 (NEW in 2026)

What Changed?

Starting in 2026, SECURE Act 2.0 introduced a new "super catch-up" provision. Workers aged 60, 61, 62, and 63 can now contribute $11,250 per year in catch-up contributions instead of the standard $8,000. This is an additional $3,250 per year for this narrow age window.

Your Contribution Path by Age

Critical: Not All Plans Offer Super Catch-Up Yet

The super catch-up is optional for employers. While many large companies have implemented it, some plans have not. Ask your HR department if your plan offers the age 60-63 super catch-up. If they say no, you can only contribute the standard $8,000 catch-up even if you're 60-63.

The Time Window Is Narrow

Super catch-up only applies from age 60 to 63. The year you turn 64, you revert to the standard $8,000 catch-up. This is a 4-year window, so if you're eligible, use it aggressively.

Important for High Earners: The Roth Catch-Up Rule (2026)

If You Earned Over $150,000 Last Year

Starting in 2026, there's a new rule: if you earned more than $150,000 in FICA wages in the prior year, your catch-up contributions must be made to a Roth 401(k) (after-tax), not as traditional (pre-tax) contributions.

What This Means

Your catch-up dollars don't reduce your current-year taxable income — they're funded with after-tax money. However, they grow tax-free and can be withdrawn tax-free in retirement (assuming you meet Roth holding period rules).

Example

If you earn $180,000 and contribute $8,000 catch-up:

The tradeoff: you lose the immediate tax deduction, but you gain tax-free growth and withdrawals in retirement. For most high earners, Roth growth is the better deal long-term.

Strategy: Using Catch-Up Contributions as an Immigrant

Scenario: Started Working at 35 (ITIN Available)

Why This Matters

You spent ages 35-50 building your career and ITIN account access. Now, ages 50-65, you're at peak earnings but running out of time. Catch-up contributions let you compress retirement savings. You can retire at 65 with a reasonable nest egg despite the 15-year late start.

Tax Benefits of Catch-Up Contributions

Reduces Current-Year Taxes (Unless You're Above $150k)

If you earn under $150,000 and contribute $8,000 to a traditional 401(k) catch-up:

Over 15 years of catch-up, that's $26,400–$28,800 in tax savings (before state taxes). That's real money.

Tax-Deferred Growth

Every dollar you contribute grows tax-free until retirement. At 7% annual growth over 15 years, $120,000 in catch-up contributions becomes $287,000. In a taxable account, you'd owe capital gains tax annually, losing 15–25% of that growth.

Common Questions

Do I Have to Max Out the Base $24,500 Before Catch-Up?

No. You can contribute catch-up without maxing the base. If you can only afford $28,000/year at age 50, you can put $24,500 in the base limit and $3,500 in catch-up. That counts.

Can I Do Both Catch-Up and IRA Catch-Up?

Yes. 401(k) and IRA contribution limits are separate. At age 50+, you can contribute:

  • $32,500 to your 401(k) (including $8,000 catch-up)
  • $8,500 to a Roth or Traditional IRA (including $1,000 IRA catch-up)
  • Total: $41,000/year
What If My Plan Doesn't Offer Catch-Up?

Most plans offer standard catch-up ($8,000 at 50+). If yours doesn't, ask HR to implement it — it's easy for plan administrators to set up. If they refuse, focus on maxing your 401(k) base and then maxing your IRA catch-up.

What Happens to Catch-Up After I Retire?

Once you stop working, you can't contribute anymore. Catch-up is only available while you're actively participating in the plan. So contribute aggressively while you're employed.