Updated for 2026 IRS limits

401(k) vs IRA: Which Should You Fund First?

Most people should use both — but in the right order. A 401(k) offers higher limits and employer match; an IRA offers more investment flexibility and Roth options without income limits (for Roth 401k) concerns.

401(k)
Employer-sponsored plan
2026 limit$24,500
Catch-up (50+)+$8,000
Employer matchOften ✓
Income limitNone ✓
Investment optionsPlan's fund menu
RMD requiredAge 73
VS
IRA
Traditional or Roth — individual
2026 limit$7,500
Catch-up (50+)+$1,100
Employer matchNone
Income limit (Roth)Phase-out ≤ $168,000
Investment optionsAny brokerage ✓
Roth IRA RMDNone ✓
Advertisement728 × 90 — Leaderboard

Which to Fund First — The 4-Step Priority Order

Most financial experts agree on this contribution order. It's not about picking one account over the other — it's about capturing free money before anything else.

1
Contribute to 401(k) up to the employer match

If your employer matches contributions, contribute at least enough to get the full match. A 50% match up to 6% of salary is an immediate 50% return on your money.

🎁 Free money — never leave this on the table
2
Max out your IRA (Traditional or Roth)

After capturing the match, fund your IRA up to the $7,500 limit ($8,600 if 50+). IRAs offer more investment flexibility and Roth IRAs have no RMDs.

📈 Maximum investment flexibility and Roth access
3
Max out your 401(k)

Return to your 401(k) and contribute up to the full $24,500 limit. This captures the large tax-deferred space even if the plan's investment options are limited.

💰 Large tax-deferred space ($24,500 vs $7,500 IRA)
4
Taxable brokerage account

If you've maxed both, a taxable brokerage account offers unlimited contributions, no penalties, and long-term capital gains tax rates.

🏦 Unlimited — no IRS contribution limits

Full Feature Comparison

Feature 401(k) IRA (Traditional / Roth)
2026 Contribution Limit
$24,500 $7,500
Age 50+ Catch-Up
+$8,000 +$1,100
SECURE 2.0 Super Catch-Up (60–63)
+$11,250 None
Employer Match
Often offered No
Tax on Contribution
Pre-tax (Trad.) or After-tax (Roth 401k) Pre-tax if deductible (Trad.) / After-tax (Roth)
Tax on Qualified Withdrawal
Taxed as income (Trad.) / Tax-free (Roth) Taxed as income (Trad.) / Tax-free (Roth)
Income Limit to Contribute
None Roth: phases out $153,000$168,000 (Single)
Traditional IRA Deduction Limit
If covered by 401k at work
N/A Phase-out $81,000$91,000 (Single)
Investment Options
Limited to plan's menu (typically 15–30 funds) Any brokerage — stocks, ETFs, REITs, etc.
Early Withdrawal (before 59½)
10% penalty + taxes on full amount Traditional: same; Roth: contributions anytime
Required Minimum Distributions
Traditional: age 73; Roth 401k: none (since 2024) Traditional: age 73; Roth IRA: never
Loan Option
Often — up to 50% of balance / $50k No loans
Portability
Roll to new 401k or IRA on job change Always portable — stays with you
Contribution Deadline
December 31 of tax year Tax filing deadline (April 15, no extension)

Pros & Cons

📊 401(k)
Pros
  • 3.3× higher contribution limit — $24,500 vs $7,500
  • Employer match — effectively free money
  • No income limits to contribute
  • SECURE 2.0 super catch-up ($11,250 at 60–63)
  • Automatic payroll deductions — easy to be consistent
  • Loan provision if needed
  • ERISA protections from creditors
Cons
  • Investment options limited to what plan offers
  • Plan quality varies widely — some have poor, high-fee funds
  • Traditional 401k RMDs required at 73
  • Less flexible for early access
🏦 IRA
Pros
  • Full investment flexibility — any asset at any brokerage
  • Roth IRA: tax-free withdrawals AND no RMDs
  • Roth IRA contributions withdrawable anytime without penalty
  • Later contribution deadline (April 15 of following year)
  • Not tied to employer — always yours
  • Great estate planning via Roth IRA (tax-free inheritance)
Cons
  • Lower contribution limit — only $7,500 per year
  • No employer match
  • Roth IRA has income limits (phase-out starts at $153,000 single)
  • Traditional IRA deductibility limited if you have a workplace plan

Common Questions

Does contributing to a 401(k) affect my ability to contribute to an IRA?

No — you can contribute to both in the same year. The limits are completely separate. However, having a 401(k) does make you "covered by a workplace plan," which may limit the deductibility of your Traditional IRA contribution depending on your income. Roth IRA eligibility is unaffected by 401(k) participation (only MAGI matters).

What is the combined maximum I can put into retirement accounts in 2026?

If you max both: $24,500 (401k) + $7,500 (IRA) = $32,000. With catch-up at 50+: $32,500 + $8,600 = $41,100. With the 60–63 super catch-up: $35,750 + $8,600 = $44,350. Employer contributions to the 401k are on top of these amounts.

Can I contribute to an IRA after the year ends?

Yes. IRA contributions for 2025 can be made until April 15, 2026 (the tax filing deadline). This gives you extra time to fund your IRA even after the calendar year ends. Note: 401(k) contributions must be made during the calendar year — by December 31.

What if my 401(k) plan has bad investment options?

Still contribute up to the employer match — even bad investment options are worth using for free match money. After capturing the match, prioritize your IRA for better investment flexibility. Then consider returning to the 401(k) for more tax-deferred space, understanding the fee drag. After leaving your employer, roll the 401(k) to an IRA for full investment freedom.

Should I open a Traditional IRA or Roth IRA alongside my 401(k)?

If you're in the 22% bracket or below and eligible for the Roth IRA, the Roth is usually the better IRA choice alongside a Traditional 401(k) — this gives you both pre-tax savings today and tax-free income in retirement. If you're above the Roth IRA income limit ($168,000 single in 2026), consider the backdoor Roth IRA or a Roth 401(k) if your employer offers it.