The Setting Every Community Up for Retirement Enhancement (SECURE) 2.0 Act brought a long list of changes for retirement plans, and one of the most impactful changes is right around the corner. Starting in 2026, participants will be required to make certain catch-up contributions on an after-tax Roth basis.
That may sound like a small detail, but it has real implications with regard to how plans are designed, how payroll systems operate, and how employees think about saving for retirement. For employers, this is both a compliance issue and a chance to re-check whether their plan is set up to make things easier for participants—or more challenging.
Beginning in 2025, participants ages 60 through 63 will be able to put more money into their retirement—up to the greater of $10,000 or 50 percent above the normal catch-up limit. These amounts will adjust for inflation in later years.
The bigger shift comes in 2026. If an employee earned more than $145,000 in wages from the plan sponsor in the prior year (a threshold that will rise with inflation), they can no longer make catch-up contributions on a pre-tax basis; the catch-up contributions must be on a Roth basis.
There are two main ways plans account for catch-up contributions:
The rule is clear: Roth catch-up contributions must show up as wages on a participant’s W-2. That means that payroll, not the recordkeeper, is responsible for getting the contributions right. Plan sponsors should start lining up conversations with payroll providers now to figure out:
Here are several proactive steps plan sponsors can take in 2025 to ensure they are well prepared for the regulatory and operational changes coming in 2026:
Employees may not notice right away, but for high earners, this is a big shift. Someone who has always contributed their catch-up contributions on a pre-tax basis will suddenly see those dollars go in on a Roth basis. Without clear communication, that could cause confusion or frustration.
On the other hand, this creates an opportunity to educate participants on the benefits of Roth savings—tax-free growth, more flexibility in retirement, and a way to diversify tax treatment down the road. And for higher earners who are above the income limits for contributing to a Rother IRA, this change effectively gives them a way to build Roth savings through their workforce plan.
The Roth catch-up requirement under the SECURE 2.0 Act doesn’t kick in until 2026, but sponsors shouldn’t wait until the last minute to get ready. The right time to start planning is now, while you still have time to adjust your plan’s design, work with payroll, and prepare employees for what’s ahead.
If you’d like to talk through how these rules will affect your organization, Sikich’s employee benefit plan team is ready to help.
To learn more about how these changes may impact your plan, join our upcoming webinar on November 6 to hear insights from our experts. Register Here
Marie S. Marks, CFP®, is a senior retirement plan specialist with over 35 years of experience serving clients with their cash balance plans, defined benefit plans and defined contribution plans including 401(k), 401(a), 457 and 403(b). Marie specializes in assisting clients in all industries with corporate retirement plans and business consultations. She establishes and oversees retirement plans, provides benchmarking and RFP services and offers documented due diligence processes for retirement planning.
Karen S. Sanchez, CPA, QPA, oversees Sikich’s employee benefits services team. She leads a group of professionals that provide services in the areas of: employee benefit plan audits, third-party administration services for retirement plans, welfare plan Form 5500 preparation, payroll tax compliance issues, and Affordable Care Act reporting.
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