rewrite this title in 20 words or less (do not provide multiple options): Contributing to my Roth IRA via the Backdoor Method on Charles Schwab (2026)

Jun 8, 2026 | Backdoor Roth IRA | 33 comments

rewrite this title in 20 words or less (do not provide multiple options): Contributing to my Roth IRA via the Backdoor Method on Charles Schwab (2026)


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33 Comments

  1. @jonathanbeachy

    Are you able to walk through the tax forms that need filled out for these transactions? I believe it's form 8606.

    Reply
  2. @haiinguy3n

    Thank you for this video! I was a little confused about the process and glad to have stumble across your helpful video. Do you know about the 8606 tax form? Apparently you have to fill that form out during tax season if you make a backdoor ROTH contribution? Information about it is unclear online. Thank you in advance!

    Reply
  3. @clarr

    Do you do the same method every year?

    Reply
  4. @JanaGroscost

    Easy peasy! Thanks for posting and walking us through this

    Reply
  5. @dsakfonggmail

    I opened up a fresh new Contributory IRA to do this Back Door conversion, but the account is “limited”. Did you encounter that, and if it’s only temporarily “limited”, how long does that new account stays “limited”?

    Reply
  6. @JoeHan268

    It's strange it does not say Roth year of 2025 or 2026. I'm doing it for 2025 in March 2026. I hope I can do it again for 2026.

    Reply
  7. @kvytc

    First of all, thanks for posting this. Much appreciated! I thought I was going crazy looking for the old workflow.

    Insane that they changed this without notifying customers or updating their documentation/videos. I contacted support and they still gave me zero useful answers on what happened to the old workflow, or what the replacement was supposed to be.

    Reply
  8. @mr_phamtastic

    Amazing video! Thank you for the clear step by step instructions

    Reply
  9. @zachcarroll4779

    Great video, their platform looks pretty straight forward for this.

    Reply
  10. @wookiecookiess1045

    Thanks for posting this 2026, detailed update guide. You should keep doing this every year 🙂

    Reply
  11. @grittykitty7188

    Thank you for posting the update. I freaked out a bit when I saw things had changed.

    Reply
  12. @impg8801

    Quick question. I know you transfer your money to Schwab’s checking account, then traditional Ira, to avoid accruing interest by waiting for the money to settle in the traditional Ira. But doesn’t the checking account also accrue interest as well?

    Reply
  13. @ferdinandracsa2067

    So I just did the conversion. But upon putting money in my traditional ira, I selected 2025 year, after I convert it, it didnt reflect that I did a conversion for the year 2025 but the money I there. Am I still able to convert for the 2026 year? Im kinda confused

    Reply
  14. @Ngavi737

    Thank you!! Also what is your keyboard? Those switches sound amazing

    Reply
  15. @golosinarosa4060

    I did exactly the same process, with the only difference being that I don’t have a Schwab investment checking account.
    Because of that, I transferred the money from my bank account into a Traditional IRA, and then from the Traditional IRA into a Roth IRA (backdoor Roth).

    I selected 0% tax withholding, but when I called Schwab to confirm, they told me that the conversion is taxable, which confused me.

    Will I actually be taxed? If so, will the tax be based on my income level, or only on the small amount of earnings (“pennies”) generated in the Traditional IRA before the conversion?

    Reply
  16. @Dane11-08

    Do you know if you can contribute for the prior year up until tax day, similar to how you can for an HSA? I didn’t see the option to choose which tax year in your walk through. Thanks!

    Reply
  17. @TheCityofZ

    Thanks for the updated version, true lifesaver!

    Reply
  18. @dodie_lodie

    Cant you just deposit money straight from your checking account to your traditional IRA?

    Reply
  19. @Antonin1738

    is "INVEST CHECKING" the Traditional IRA? or is it the traditional IRA "Contributory"? I'm confused on that

    Reply
  20. @SomsaiArts

    Thank you! I was wondering if I made the wrong account lmao. Since I wasn't getting the prompt for Roth conversion.

    Reply
  21. @mariogabor479

    Thank you for this video. I used your videos to assist me, and I really appreciate your effort.

    Reply
  22. @theaacorpuz

    Thanks so much for the updated video! 🙂

    Reply
  23. @itsZeeee

    I just did this process. when I went to the balances page of my Roth IRA account, it says $0 for the contribution year and the previous year. is the amount I transferred not linked to any particular year?

    Reply
  24. @hyemihan

    Hi, thank you for this! Did you wait a day after you transferred money to your IRA account to transfer to the Roth IRA account, or did it all in one day?

    Reply
  25. @MDHAQUE-v7u

    Thanks for the information. I have a question on the residual $0.02 remains on the contributory IRA from last year. For this year conversion how to handle this amount for Roth conversion.?

    Reply
  26. @KellyMKell

    Thanks for updating! Those new transfer screen options confused me 🙂

    Reply
  27. @After6Trades

    Thanks for providing an updated 2026 version! Exactly what I was looking for since the webpage looks different now.

    Reply
  28. @RollSe7en

    I used to DCA my Roth backdoor conversions once each month, but then I read that history has shown that returns end up being better if one invests the entire Roth lump sum at the start of the year. I have my backdoor through Vanguard and they make it super simple to perform backdoor conversions.

    Reply
  29. @atkim122

    Thank you!! Quick question, I too set up a zero balance traditional IRA that I'll use for nothing but to do backdoor Roths. Suppose in the time your $7500 sat in the traditional long enough to earn however minimal interest at the end of the month (e.g. $0.05). It can't go into the Roth since you maxed out your $7500 for the year. But I don't like the idea of ANY amount of money sitting in the traditional because of the pro rata rule (for future backdoor roths). Since you put after-tax $7500 into the traditional, can the $0.05 move in the other direction to your schwab checkingm, restoring the traditional ira back to a zero balance?

    I suppose I could backdoor $7499, and if any interest is earned on that, backdoor that amount to stay within my $7500 limit.

    Reply

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