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Whats the point of Roth IRA? : r personalfinance - Reddit Roth accounts are a hedge against future tax hikes and tax rate insecurity There’s a reason Roth accounts are always subject to elimination every few years, tax revenue from Roth users is far less than from traditional Think of it like a fixed rate mortgage with a low interest rate during high interest rate periods
Whats the difference between a Roth Basic and a Roth Bonus?? - Reddit Roth basic: your normal paycheck Roth bonus: any annual year-end bonus paycheck you get You’d usually do just the basic unless you’re not able to max out with your normal paycheck and want to direct a portion of your bonus to the 401k Depending on your income, traditional 401k is likely better for you tax-wise than a Roth 401k is
Is a Roth 401(k) clearly better than a Traditional 401(k) or . . . - Reddit If traditional and Roth are taxed at the same rate (Roth now, vs traditional in X years) they are mathematically the same However, make sure you think about what the tax rate on that money will be When you contribute to a traditional now instead of a Roth, this is money that would be taxed at your highest marginal rate
SO Confused About How to Actually Invest my Roth IRA I’m new to Roth IRA with Fidelity and cannot trade I see the Trade option but when I go there and choose a stock, it has the Open an Investing Account button I don’t know what I’m doing wrong or how they’re setting up my account
401K. . . . Pre-Tax, After Tax, and or Roth??? - Reddit Roth is almost never the correct answer, outside of some outlier situations Essentially you need to look at effective tax rates vs top marginal Roth contributions (and thus withdrawals) are taxed at your top marginal tax rate (so 24% for your income) because all post-tax money is fungible
Roth IRA vs. Traditional IRA? : r personalfinance - Reddit 35-Year Winner: Roth IRA, by just under $7,500 ***Over 40 Years*** If he puts the $6000 in a Roth IRA and keeps it there for 40 years: His 2021 income was $30,000 After the standard deduction of $12,550, his taxable income is $17,450 He will have to pay $1,895 in federal income taxes
401k Pre-Tax or 401k Roth? : r personalfinance - Reddit I’m 27 years old and I’ve been working for 5 years (with the same company) and have been contributing to a 401k pre tax plan every paycheck In 2018 I started a Roth IRA account and have been maxing it out since The 401k is a target retirement fund and the Roth contributions are going towards a total market index fund
Should I put $6000 in Roth IRA at once or put $500 per month? If you are instead doing Backdoor Roth (I e make non deductible contribution to traditional IRA and do Roth Conversion) for previous year, you need to file 8606 in the returns to update the basis of the non deductible contribution made to traditional IRA and since you have already filed, you should skip otherwise you will be double taxed
401k contributions - Roth vs pre-tax : r investing - Reddit You may switch employers and be somewhere that Roth is not an option, leaving only your Roth IRA as an option which is a much smaller limit than 401k ($5 5k vs $18 5k) Balancing the withdrawal rate between Roth and Traditional to maintain good income but low tax liability means having some Roth and some Traditional
What salary makes a Roth 401k make more sense then a regular 401k For example, you put in a Roth 401k, switch jobs, roll to Roth IRA, then in 5 years you can pull out a big chunk of the money without penalties The 5-year waiting period applies to a taxable conversion, i e , from a traditional 401k or traditional IRA to Roth IRA, where the amount you convert has to be included as taxable income