The post Doctors Earning $400K Are Quietly Funneling $70,000 a Year Into a Roth the IRS Says They Can’t Have appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..
A physician pulling $400,000 a year sits well above the Roth IRA contribution income limit. The IRS closes the front door. It leaves the side and back doors wide open, and a growing number of doctors are walking through both to move roughly $70,000 a year into Roth accounts the direct rules would forbid.
Here is how the play works, why the employment setup matters, and where the pro-rata trap eats the strategy alive.
Direct Roth IRA contributions phase out once modified adjusted gross income crosses IRS thresholds that reset each year (verify the current-year phase-out at IRS.gov). A single physician earning $400,000 is far above the cutoff. So is most married-filing-jointly attending income once both spouses work.
The tax stakes are real. In tax year 2026, single filers hit the 32% bracket at $201,775 and the 35% bracket at $256,225. A $400K single-filing doctor is squarely in 35% territory. Every dollar that grows tax-free in a Roth is a dollar that avoids decades of drag at those rates in retirement.
The mechanic is boring and legal. As Suze Orman puts it, “You simply open up a non-deductible IRA, you do not take it off your taxes, and you convert it to a Roth IRA, because you can convert any amount of money you want and there are no income limitations on conversion.” Clark Howard describes the same maneuver: “People can do a non-deductible IRA, and if you jump through the right hoops, you can then virtually immediately convert it into a Roth IRA.”
That gets a physician the annual IRA contribution amount into Roth. Useful, but small. The real money is behind door two.
The IRS caps employee elective deferrals to a 401(k) at one number and caps total annual additions (employee + employer + after-tax) at a much bigger one, roughly the $70,000 range in recent years (verify the 2026 415(c) limit at IRS.gov). The gap between those two caps is the mega backdoor.
The sequence for a hospital-employed physician whose plan allows it:
Stack the backdoor Roth IRA on top and the total funneled into Roth accounts lands near the headline figure. The IRS blocked the direct Roth contribution; it did not block this.
W-2 hospitalist or academic physician: The mega backdoor only works if the employer’s 401(k) or 403(b) allows after-tax contributions and in-service conversions. Many academic 403(b) plans do not. Read the summary plan description. If both features exist, a 403(b) plus a governmental 457(b) can stack elective deferrals across two plans, a quirk unique to hospital and university systems.
1099 locum, moonlighter, or practice owner: A Solo 401(k) from a provider that permits after-tax contributions and in-plan Roth conversions replicates the mega backdoor for self-employed income. Employer profit-sharing is set by the physician-owner, so the full 415(c) space is controllable. This is the cleanest path, and most brokerage default Solo 401(k) plans do not allow it. A custom plan document is usually required.
The IRS applies a pro-rata rule to Roth conversions from IRAs. A physician with a large rollover IRA from a residency-era 401(k) will find that a “backdoor” conversion is taxed proportionally across pre-tax and after-tax balances, not just on the new $7,000 non-deductible contribution.
The fix, when a current employer plan accepts incoming rollovers, is to roll pre-tax IRA balances into the 401(k) or 403(b) before December 31 of the conversion year. That empties the IRA side of the pro-rata calculation. Suze Orman notes the same logic for anyone protecting a backdoor Roth: “You would be better off to just simply roll your traditional 401(k) from your former employer into your new employer’s 401(k) plan.”
A CPA or fiduciary advisor familiar with physician compensation should sign off before a doctor moves five figures through this structure.
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The post Doctors Earning $400K Are Quietly Funneling $70,000 a Year Into a Roth the IRS Says They Can’t Have appeared first on 24/7 Wall St..


