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FundsForBudget > Personal Finance > Retirement > Roth 401(k) vs. After-Tax 401(k) Contributions
Retirement

Roth 401(k) vs. After-Tax 401(k) Contributions

TSP Staff By TSP Staff Last updated: August 7, 2025 8 Min Read
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Contributions to Roth 401(k) accounts and after-tax contributions to regular 401(k) accounts both involve after-tax dollars, but they follow different tax and distribution rules. Roth 401(k) contributions grow tax-free and allow tax-free withdrawals of both contributions and earnings in retirement if conditions are met. After-tax 401(k) contributions, by contrast, may be withdrawn tax-free but earnings are taxable. After-tax 401(k) accounts are often used to enable a mega backdoor Roth conversion.

Roth vs. After-Tax 401(k): What’s the Difference?

A Roth 401(k) is a designated account within an employer-sponsored plan where contributions are made with after-tax dollars. Once inside the account, both contributions and investment earnings grow tax-free.

If the account holder is at least 59 ½ and the account has been open for five years, withdrawals are entirely tax-free, including any gains. This structure mirrors a Roth IRA but allows for higher annual contribution limits and access to employer matches, which are placed in a separate pre-tax account.

An after-tax 401(k) contribution, by contrast, is a non-deductible addition made to a non-Roth traditional 401(k) after the contribution limit for regular 401(k) accounts has been reached. Unlike Roth contributions, earnings on after-tax contributions are taxable upon withdrawal.

However, after-tax 401(k) contributions can be rolled over into a Roth IRA through a mega backdoor Roth strategy. Then the future growth will be tax-free. Without such a conversion, the tax treatment of gains makes after-tax 401(k) contributions less favorable for long-term growth.

While both options involve after-tax dollars, the long-term tax outcomes and strategic uses differ significantly between the two.

Feature Roth 401(k) Contributions After-Tax 401(k) Contributions
Contribution Source After-tax income After-tax income
Qualified Withdrawals Tax-free if age 59 ½ and held for 5+ years Contributions are tax-free; earnings are taxable
Contribution Limit (2025) $23,500 (plus catch-up, if eligible) Limited by overall plan cap ($70,000 including all sources)
Income Limits to Contribute None None