The post SECURE 2.0 Changes Force High Earners to Rethink 401(k) Strategy. Here’s the Math. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A reader on a Bogleheads forum recently posed the question that frames this entire piece: at 58 with $2.3 million already saved in a traditional 401(k), why keep stuffing more pretax dollars into an account future-you will hate?
The default planner answer still defaults to “max it out.” For high earners with seven-figure balances, that answer is wrong by 2026. Three rule changes have flipped the math: the SECURE 2.0 mandatory Roth catch-up for those who earned more than $150,000 in 2025, the IRMAA premium surcharges that ride on top of withdrawals, and a tax code where long-term capital gains still top out at 23.8% while the top ordinary rate climbs to 37%.
Cutting 401(k) deferrals in half and redirecting the freed cash to a taxable brokerage is the cleaner path at this balance.
The 2026 standard employee deferral limit is $24,500. Add the age 50-plus catch-up of $8,000 and the cap rises to $32,500. The 60-to-63 super catch-up pushes it to $35,750, but that does not apply yet to a 58-year-old.
Starting this year, if W-2 wages crossed $150,000 in 2025, that catch-up must go into a Roth 401(k). No upfront deduction. For a 55-year-old in the 24% bracket, the old rules cut the federal bill by about $1,900 on an $8,000 catch-up; the new rules pull that benefit to zero. A 58-year-old in the 32% bracket loses roughly $2,560 of immediate tax shelter on the same contribution.
Now look at where the existing $2.3M is heading. At a 6% return through age 73 when RMDs begin, the balance compounds toward a materially larger figure without another dollar added. The first RMD divides by the IRS Uniform Lifetime Table factor of 26.5, producing a forced withdrawal near a six-figure sum. Every dollar is ordinary income, stacked on top of Social Security and any pension.
That stack drags up to 85% of Social Security into taxable income and pierces the first IRMAA tier, adding $70 to $440 per person per month to Medicare premiums. The retiree who saved 32 cents on the dollar at 58 may hand back 40 cents on the dollar at 75.
Money saved outside the 401(k) carries none of those strings. Qualified dividends and long-term gains are taxed at 0%, 15%, or 20%, with the 3.8% Net Investment Income Tax capping the structure at 23.8% for the highest earners. The gap between 23.8% and an effective 40% marginal rate on a forced RMD is roughly 16 points. On $400,000 of withdrawals across a long retirement, that gap is $64,000 of avoided tax.
Three more brokerage features matter at this balance:
With the Fed funds rate at 3.75% and the 10-year Treasury yielding 4.48%, even a plain Treasury ladder inside the brokerage clears a real after-tax return that is competitive with tax-deferred growth.
For the $2.3M-at-58 household, the moves are concrete:
If projected RMDs at 73 push past $200,000, the brokerage-plus-Roth strategy prevents a tax bomb the next pretax contribution helps build.
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The post SECURE 2.0 Changes Force High Earners to Rethink 401(k) Strategy. Here’s the Math. appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..

